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CASE FORMULATION FOR PERSONALITY DISORDERS TAILORING PSYCHOTHERAPY TO THE INDIVIDUAL CLIENT Edited by
Ueli Kramer Foreword by
Mary C. Zanarini
Academic Press is an imprint of Elsevier 125 London Wall, London EC2Y 5AS, United Kingdom 525 B Street, Suite 1650, San Diego, CA 92101, United States 50 Hampshire Street, 5th Floor, Cambridge, MA 02139, United States The Boulevard, Langford Lane, Kidlington, Oxford OX5 1GB, United Kingdom Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Details on how to seek permission, further information about the Publisher’s permissions policies and our arrangements with organizations such as the Copyright Clearance Center and the Copyright Licensing Agency, can be found at our website: www.elsevier.com/permissions. This book and the individual contributions contained in it are protected under copyright by the Publisher (other than as may be noted herein). Notices Knowledge and best practice in this field are constantly changing. As new research and experience broaden our understanding, changes in research methods, professional practices, or medical treatment may become necessary. Practitioners and researchers must always rely on their own experience and knowledge in evaluating and using any information, methods, compounds, or experiments described herein. In using such information or methods they should be mindful of their own safety and the safety of others, including parties for whom they have a professional responsibility. To the fullest extent of the law, neither the Publisher nor the authors, contributors, or editors, assume any liability for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods, products, instructions, or ideas contained in the material herein. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN: 978-0-12-813521-1 For information on all Academic Press publications visit our website at https://www.elsevier.com/books-and-journals
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About the Editor Ueli Kramer, PhD, is Privat-Docent, psychotherapy researcher and clinical psychotherapist according to Federal Law, at the Department of Psychiatry (Institute of Psychotherapy and General Psychiatry Service), University of Lausanne, Switzerland. He holds an adjunct appointment at the Department of Psychology, University of Windsor, Canada. His research focuses on process and outcome in psychotherapy, in particular the mechanisms of change in treatments of personality disorders and case formulation in personality disorders. He is a broadly trained clinician, working from an integrative psychotherapy perspective. He serves on the editorial board of Psychotherapy Research, Journal of Personality Disorders, Journal of Psychotherapy Integration and Pragmatic Case Studies in Psychotherapy, among others. Dr. Kramer is the co-recipient of the 2015 Inger Salling Award, the recipient of the 2016 Outstanding Early Career Achievement Award of the Society for Psychotherapy Research, the 2016 Hamburg Award for Personality Disorders and the 2018 Marvin Goldfried New Researcher Award of the Society for the Exploration of Psychotherapy Integration.
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List of Contributors Michael A. Strating University of Windsor, Windsor, Ontario, Canada Arnoud Arntz Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Cord Benecke Department of Psychology, University of Kassel, Kassel, Germany Lorna Smith Benjamin University of Utah Neuropsychiatric Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States Kate H. Bentley Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States Tali Boritz Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada; Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada Odette Brand-de Wilde Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Franz Caspar University of Bern, Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Bern, Switzerland Andrew M. Chanen Orygen, The National Centre of Excellence in Youth Mental Health, Melbourne, Australia; Centre for Youth Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia; Orygen Youth Health, Northwestern Mental Health, Melbourne, Australia Lois W. Choi-Kain McLean Hospital, Belmont, MA, United States Kenneth L. Critchfield Department of Graduate Psychology, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA, United States Giancarlo Dimaggio Centro di Terapia Metacognitiva Interpersonale, Rome, Italy M. Dudeck Department of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Ulm University, Germany Johannes C. Ehrenthal Institute of Medical Psychology, Heidelberg University, Germany Catherine F. Eubanks Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University, New York, NY, United States Eva Fassbinder Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Luebeck, Luebeck, Germany Ellen F. Finch McLean Hospital, Belmont, MA, United States I. Franke Department of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Ulm University, Germany Sigmund Karterud Norwegian Institute for Mentalizing, Oslo, Norway Ian B. Kerr Department of Psychotherapy, Coathill Hospital, Coatbridge, Scotland
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List of Contributors
Yogev Kivity Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, United States Megan Knoll McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Mickey T. Kongerslev Centre of Excellence on Personality Disorder, Region Zealand Psychiatry, Slagelse, Denmark; Psychiatric Research Unit, Region Zealand Psychiatry, Slagelse, Denmark; Psychiatric Clinic Roskilde, Region Zealand Psychiatry, Roskilde, Denmark; Department of Psychology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark Kenneth N. Levy Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, United States; Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY, United States Michelle Leybman Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada Louise K. McCutcheon Orygen, The National Centre of Excellence in Youth Mental Health, Melbourne, Australia; Centre for Youth Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia; Orygen Youth Health, Northwestern Mental Health, Melbourne, Australia Shelley McMain Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada; Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada Mary McMurran Institute of Mental Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom St. Nigel Department of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Ulm University, Germany Mariafé T. Panizo Department of Graduate Psychology, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA, United States Antonio Pascual-Leone University of Windsor, Windsor, Ontario, Canada J. Christopher Perry McGill University at the Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Raffaele Popolo Centro di Terapia Metacognitiva Interpersonale, Rome, Italy Rainer Sachse IPP, Institut für Psychologische Psychotherapie, Bochum, Germany Giampaolo Salvatore Centro di Terapia Metacognitiva Interpersonale, Rome, Italy Shannon Sauer-Zavala Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Boston University, Boston, MA, United States Peter Sturmey The Graduate Center and Department of Psychology, Queens College, City University of New York, Queens, NY, United States Viet Tran McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Michael A. Westerman New York University, New York, United States Julianne G. Wilner Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Boston University, Boston, MA, United States Frank E. Yeomans Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY, United States
Foreword Dr. Kramer has a deep and abiding interest and expertise in the many forms of psychotherapy that have been developed for those with personality disorders or less than optimally mature ways of seeing themselves and others and functioning in the world. He has brought together in this book chapters written on each of the five major empirically based treatments for borderline personality disorder (BPD; Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Transferencefocused Psychotherapy, Mentalization-based Treatment, General Psychiatric Management, and Schema-Focused Therapy) and two others that are widely used in their treatment (Cognitive Analytic Therapy and the Unified Protocol for Emotional Disorders that has been adapted for BPD). Other chapters pertain to therapies used with a variety of personality disorders. Each chapter carefully describes a specific form of psychotherapy or a method for structuring a case formulation. Each type of therapy is somewhat different than the others. Each method for developing a case formulation if also different and even unique to that form of treatment. Any clinician or trainee interested in working with patients with a personality disorder will benefit from reading this book. They will learn about the wide variety of therapies for these disorders that are available for their treatment. They will also learn about the content and method of case formulation for the many treatments described in this comprehensive book. Some of these types of case formulation focus more on the past than others. Some focus more on a collaborative process than others. All aim to base a treatment on a written formulation of what is causing the suffering and impairment of a patient at a time in his or her life. Some of the treatments described are psychodynamic in nature and others are more cognitive or behavioral. They offer a wide array of treatments to choose from based on the personality of the therapist and the presentation and problems of a patient. This is an empirical age and one would hope that most clinicians working with this patient population will be trained in one or more of these evidence-based treatments. One would also hope that case formulations will be developed with the care and thought evidenced in this book. Dr. Kramer who has been a valued colleague of mine for several years deserves credit for putting this worthwhile book together. His expertise is clear in the choices he has made for this comprehensive and compelling book. Mary C. Zanarini
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Introduction CASE FORMULATION: FROM THE THEORY TO THE CASE
UELI KRAMER Case formulation links the process of diagnosis with the treatment, psychopathology with psychotherapy, the clinical theory with the unique case, and the general with the particular. As such, it gives the therapist a unique opportunity for clinically appropriate decision making, personalizing the intervention and gaining insight into the client’s subjective experience. Research has shown that experts in psychotherapy propose parsimonious, synthetic and clinically relevant case formulations. When comparing with less experienced psychotherapists, experts in psychotherapy seem to make ‘better’ – more precise and less erroneous – case formulations of their client’s situations (Eells, Lombart, Kendjelic, Turner, & Lucas, 2005), and adopt a more cautious and hypothetical stance with regard to their own formulation (Dudley, Ingham, Sowerby, & Freeston, 2015). Despite these conclusions, psychotherapy models – and psychotherapy research – have not always used the potential of the idiographics contained in case formulations (Eells, 2013a,b; Persons, 1991, 2013). Clients presenting with a personality disorder (PD) may particularly benefit from a therapy process informed by effective case formulation. Their symptoms and problematic processes often are manifold and multilayered, which may require a clinically relevant formulation; also, these processes have started to be empirically understood on the level of the distinct categories. This population presents with a large between-client heterogeneity, which challenges categorical systems of classification, and may fundamentally require an individualized approach to the understanding and the treatment. As noted by Livesley (2018), the heterogeneity of the PDs may be reflected in the plurality of theoretical perspectives the field currently characterizes. Case formulation may play a pivotal role in breaking multiple theories down to an individual case. What precision medicine is for the treatment of somatic disorders is case formulation for the treatment of mental disorders, and in particular, personality disorders: the missing link between nomothetic knowledge bases and the idiographic contents of the individual client’s narrative, experience and self-presentation. It is so important that a recent biannual conference of the North American Chapter of the Society for Psychotherapy
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Research (NA-SPR, at Berkeley, CA, USA, in November 2016) dedicated its theme to the personalization of psychotherapy. To acknowledge SPR as a source of inspiration of my work, this book borrows its subtitle from this conference.
WHAT IS CASE FORMULATION? Case formulation may generally be defined as ‘a hypothesis about the causes, precipitants, and maintaining influences of a person’s psychological, interpersonal, and behavioral problems’ (Eells, 2007, p. 4). Adopting a disorder-specific approach, as in the present volume, we understand under case formulation a set of idiosyncratic hypotheses, explaining observations through the lenses of both clinical theory and relevant knowledge bases, with the aiming of understanding a client. As such, it synthesizes information and integrates, differentiates and gives meaning to seemingly contradictory observations. The meaning constructed in this process may vary in focus, depth and differentiation. Whereas the observed behaviour may be similar across individuals, the symbolized meaning may be different for each of these: case formulation helps explaining these differences. It provides the therapist with a compass, which assists him/her to select an intervention, helps give meaning to emerging manifestations, helps shape the therapy planning and implementation, and the therapist relationship offer. Case formulation may help in clinically critical situations, to understand self-harming behaviour or an experience of interpersonal rage or deep grief, which may be specific interaction situations where an evidence-based therapy intervention does not always indicate what to do. An individualized case formulation is a blueprint for the therapy process, which should be critically and dynamically revised as the therapy progresses. As such, it implies the therapist is active meta-conceptualizing the ongoing process, according to the underlying clinical theory. There is a feedback loop incorporated in case formulation methodology (Eells, 2013a): the formulation contains predictions about the client’s behaviour and experience which will then be monitored, tested and assessed throughout the entire psychotherapy, the result of this process is then fed back into the case formulation. Case conceptualization may be a therapist activity, which may help to study the development of expertise in psychotherapy (Chi, 2006; Dudley et al., 2015; Vollmer, Spada, Caspar, & Burri, 2013). Case formulation helps bridge a still present gap between science and practice. Closing such a gap was considered by Goldfried (2010) as one of the major tasks of psychotherapy integration in the 21st century. Case formulation, in its present formats, is a modern – for some authors post-modern – component of psychological and psychotherapeutic intervention (Caspar, 2000; Eells, 2007; Ingram, 2016; Johnstone & Dallos, 2013;
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Macneil, Hasty, Conus, & Berk, 2012; Persons, 1989; Sturmey, 2009). It has outgrown of the early practices of medical history taking, the examination of case history and psychiatric anamnesis. Whereas early – Hippocratic medical – practices of describing clinical features in a client, followed by the activities of inferring and concluding, are still of relevance in today’s psychiatry and medicine in general (Eells, 2007), their empirical stance has inspired the development of many psychotherapy case formulation methods. Case formulation methodology has not the same history in each of the traditional clinical theories. Psychoanalysis contributed to contemporary case formulation with its rich theoretical development gained from a series of case studies that were rigorously documented by the use of in-session information for the formulation (Eells, 2007; Gill, Newman, & Redlich, 1954). Early psychoanalytic formulations tended to use a quite high degree of inference, moving away from the actual observed facts. Cognitive-behavioural therapy did not develop case formulation methods nor conceptualize the need for assessment until the 1960s (Goldfried & Pomeranz, 1968; Kanfer & Saslow, 1965; Tarrier, 2006) with the emergence of functional analyses. The latter helped establish the links between symptoms, psychological processes and outcomes, as demonstrated by empirical research; the symbolic meaning of the client’s experience was not modelled in these early approaches. Humanistic therapies have traditionally taken a radical approach to case formulation, deeming it as a tool impeding on the productive collaborative therapy process (Rogers, 1951). Modern theorists articulate an integrative position by focusing on facets of emotional experience to be formulated from an idiographic perspective (Goldman & Greenberg, 2015).
A DISORDER-SPECIFIC APPROACH TO CASE FORMULATION Personality disorders (PDs) do not give the therapist free rein to formulate a case. Case formulation grounded in a group of disorder, specifically personality disorders, may be relevant facing clients which have been described as ‘difficult’. Indeed, conclusions from nomothetic research on aetiology, psychopathology and treatment of PD may be available for translation into practice of formulation. To do this, we argue that case formulation is central: it is time to articulate – and individualize – the psychopathological constraints a therapist faces when starting a treatment with a client with personality pathology. Before we outline possible constraints to case formulation, one word on the notion of personality disorder or pathology. This is important in times when scholars raise serious doubts about categorical classifications, or specific diagnostic criteria related to a particular personality disorder, for example related to their
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lack of comprehensiveness and articulation with the underlying psychological features (Herpertz et al., 2017a,b; Livesley, 2018; Widiger, 2018). Dimensional approaches tend to provide a more fine-grained picture of the PD, but do not replace an individualized case formulation. In the present volume, a certain focus will be laid on the well-researched category of borderline personality disorder (BPD), but specific psychological and psychopathological constraints pertain also to many other categories of PDs, such as narcissistic, antisocial, dependent and avoidant, as well as to relevant personality traits. We understand the so-called ‘constraints’ to case formulation in the weakest sense possible: these may be client’s clinical features as described by (mainly nomothetic) research. These features may emerge at specific occasions – moments in therapy – enabling the therapist to reflect and test his/her formulated hypothesis facing the individual client and learn from him/her. It does not mean that each client must present the ‘constraining’ feature nor that each case formulation method must explain all these features for a given client. These constraints to case formulation may encompass (1) psychopathological and psychological processes, and (2) contextual knowledge. Both will be introduced below, with the aim of providing an integrative prism through which readers may discover the series of chapters in the present volume. An integrative and comparative approach will be adopted in the final chapter, discussing the main constraints, possible ways to address them and relationship implications discussed by the authors.
CONSTRAINTS TO CASE FORMULATION FOR PERSONALITY DISORDERS: OCCASIONS TO LEARN FROM THE INDIVIDUAL CLIENT The following summarized knowledge base may be considered a possible starting point of occasions to learn from the individual client. We call this synthesis a preliminary, and certainly incomplete, list of psychological and psychopathological constraints related to personality disorders. It stands for an even larger, and continuously evolving, mostly nomothetic knowledge base a clinician may draw from when formulating a case, in articulation with clinical theory. In order to increase the links with current diagnostic conceptualizations of personality pathology, we link these constraints with the Alternative Model for Personality Disorders in the DSM-5 (APA, 2013). Clients with PD may present with identity problems (DSM-5 Alternative Model impairment area identity). These may not only encompass the difficulty of knowing who they are, but also a more profound loss of the sense of direction, felt fragmentation and quick changes in the narrative and in the interpersonal coherence, along with highly conflictual self-images
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(Westen & Cohen, 1993). Clients with PDs may present with vague and ill-defined episodic memories. This may be true for clients with BPD who tend to present with severe inconsistencies in the autobiographic memory, along with generalized and incomplete narratives (Startup et al., 2001). Clients with PDs may present with high levels of motivational problems, or a conflictual motivational stance (DSM-5 Alternative Model impairment area self-direction). The experience of internal conflictuality and high ambivalence with regard to change was described in qualitative research on clients with BPD (e.g., Berthoud, Kramer, de Roten, Despland, & Caspar, 2013). Clients with PDs may present with low levels of self-esteem and selfvalue, and self-criticism in the elaboration of sensitive self-related information. This is particularly true for BPD (e.g., Beeney, Hallquist, Ellison, & Levy, 2016; Vater, Schröder-Abé, Weissgerber, Roepke, & Schütz, 2015) and narcissistic personality disorder (NPD; Vater et al., 2013). Clients with PDs may fail in meta-cognitive tasks when they are asked to reflect upon their own experience, their own thoughts or the thoughts of others (DMS-5 Alternative Model impairment area empathy). Clients with BPD present with certain difficulties with theory of mind, or empathy, tasks (Dimaggio & Brüne, 2016; O’Neill et al., 2015), they lack the capacity to put oneself into the other person’s experience, and understand their experience using this resonating experience. Clients with BPD may present with hypermentalizing in the context of significant relationships. When confronted with conflictual information, such a particularly harmful over-interpretative stance may emerge (Sharp et al., 2016). It is also more difficult for them to detect non-verbal signs and emotion expression in others. Specific abilities of empathy lack in clients with NPD (Roepke & Vater, 2014). Clients with BPD may present with insecure attachments patterns (DSM-5 Alternative Model impairment area intimacy), when compared with healthy controls, in particular over-involved or anxious-avoidant attachment styles in a majority of the observed cases (Bo & Kongerslev, 2017; Fonagy et al., 1996). Clients with PDs may present with repetitive interpersonal patterns and may present with problematic relationship offers to other persons (Drapeau, Perry, & Koerner, 2012) and problematic attachment patterns (Eikenaes, Pederson, & Wilberg, 2016). Clients with borderline personality disorder (BPD), as well as NPD, may present with emotion dysregulation when confronted with stressful stimuli (DSM-5 Alternative Model trait domain negative affectivity vs. emotional stability; Dixon-Gordon, Peters, Fertuck, & Yen, 2017; EbnerPriemer et al., 2007; Koenigsberg et al., 2002; Ronningstam, 2016; Schmahl et al., 2014). Compared to healthy controls and certain other psychological disorders, they have a unique, at times particularly harmful, way of coping with stressful stimuli (Kramer, 2014). Emotion dysregulation has neurobiological underpinnings, at least for BPD (Schulze, Schmahl, & Niedtfeld, 2016). Clients with PDs were reported to lack emotion awareness. Also
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called alexithymia, the difficulty of putting words on one’s experience was described in experimental (De Panfilis et al., 2015) and clinical studies (Nicolo et al., 2011; Ogrodniczuk, Piper, & Joyce, 2011). Clients with BPD may have an altered perception of pain, as compared to healthy controls. These clients may support higher levels of objectively painful stimuli, and may also use these sensations as means to regulate emotions (Schmahl et al., 2014); some of these manifestations have neurobiological correlates. Clients with PD may present with vague and shallow processing of emotional and cognitive contents; shallow verbal self-reports of worry mediated the relationship between PD pathology and the specificity of autobiographical memories (Spinhoven, Bamelis, Molendijk, Haringsma, & Arntz, 2009). Clients with certain types of PD, in particular avoidant and obsessivecompulsive, may present with emotion restriction or overcontrol and inhibitory processes (DSM-5 Alternative Model trait domain detachment vs. extraversion; Popolo et al., 2014). Clients with BPD, and probably other PDs, may present with low scores on interpersonal agreeableness (DSM-5 Alternative Model trait domain antagonism vs. agreeableness; Zanarini, 2005), and the presence of interpersonal hostility, a personality feature which was shown to be related to outcome in psychotherapy (Hirsh, Quilty, Bagby, & McMain, 2012; Zufferey, Caspar, & Kramer, 2018). Clients with BPD, NPD and certain other PDs may present with inaccurate emotion expression, in particular the expression of anger (DSM-5 Alternative Model trait domain disinhibition vs. conscientiousness; Berenson, Downey, Rafaeli, Coifman, & Paquin, 2011). Male clients with BPD lack executive control and present difficulty in impulse control, when confronted with interpersonal rejection; this pattern may explain the oftentimes aggressive outbursts observed in these clients (Herpertz et al., 2017). Clients with PDs present with overgeneralized thinking which are biases toward an overreliance on certain negative information, and with certain types of dichotomous thinking (DSM-5 Alternative Model trait domain psychoticism vs. lucidity; Kramer, Vaudroz, Ruggeri, & Drapeau, 2013; Veen & Arntz, 2000). Clients with PD may present with harmful assumptions about relationships, themselves and the world, compared with healthy controls (Arntz, Dietzel, & Dreessen, 1999). In addition to these psychological and psychopathological constraints, there may be at least three contextual constraints, which are occasions for the therapist to reflect upon his/her practice of case formulation in its context: the role of culture, the legal obligation to treatment and client’s age (and possibly other socio-demographic variables). Cultural context is central when formulating a case, in particular with severe disorders, e.g., personality disorders. In general, clinicians working in specific contexts may be subject to biased over-rating of normal
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phenomena as being clinically relevant, as was shown by Rosenhan (1973). More specifically, culture as broad value system may impact – sometimes unwillingly – the therapist in the practice of case formulation and may impact the client in his/her clinical presentation. In addition, culture may impact both interaction partners on secondary levels, in the interpersonal encounter: the client anticipating or guessing ‘cultural’ specificities of the therapist and the therapist guessing ‘cultural’ specificities of the client. This may lead to two types of diagnostic, or case formulation, biases (Edwards, 1982): (1) type I (therapist considers a client behaviour as pathological while it is normal given the client’s cultural context); (2) type II (therapist considers a client behaviour as normal, by invoking the client’s ‘culture’, while it is pathological). A context of legal, or otherwise more formal, constraint to treatment may affect case formulation on the contextual level. In these contexts, the therapists may be more aware of ethical dilemmas, which may occur in any case formulation (Hart, Sturmey, Logan, & McMurran, 2011). These contexts may affect the focus, the depth and the comprehensiveness of the case formulation. Age of the client, gender and other socio-demographic variables may function as contextual factors potentially influencing the therapist activity of case formulation. In particular facing youth, the question is discussed whether the therapist’s understanding of the presenting problems should be done by taking into account the context – or the opinion – of the actual family members and their sets of interactions (Kongerslev, Chanen, & Simonsen, 2015).
INTEGRATIVE APPROACH TO CASE FORMULATION FOR PERSONALITY DISORDERS AND THE ROLE OF CLINICAL THEORY After this overview of some of the constraints related to a disorder-specific approach to case formulation – there are certainly others – it might now become a daunting experience to try to formulate a case. In clinical reality, the therapist may be confronted with a number of such constraints, and the function of case formulation may be used here as argument: case formulation aims at facilitating a synthesis of seemingly contradictory or overwhelming information, by creating clinically useful ‘solution algorithms’ (Eells et al., 2005) or heuristics for psychotherapeutic intervention aiming at bringing about change. As noted by Gigerenzer and Brighton (2011), not without some humour, therapists are human beings and part of the species of homo heuristicus. Human beings, as they practice a focused activity, use shortcuts and abbreviations to be effective. Expert psychotherapists, as they formulate an individual case, need effective conceptual and methodological tools which favour the therapist self- and other-reflexive
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processes and which may be directly used in practice. It may be argued that an effective case formulation is therefore only to a certain degree comprehensive and accurate, while at the same time being parsimonious and marked by clinical utility for the therapeutic process and outcome. As such, the therapist activity of formulating a case may be considered a practice-infused theory-building process, based on a single case: the individual client. This process of theory-building is a generative and creative one where the actual content of the formulation is unknown at the moment of the initial client-therapist encounter. Case formulation becomes a central piece for a particular type of research that is case study research (Fishman & Edwards, 2017). While the clinical theory at hand is indispensable, the same theory may be challenged by empirical data. This makes the theoretical assumptions in each model of case formulation malleable to revision and transformation from within, by using the observed information from the clinical case, thus creating a feed-back loop. The theory, or explanation, formulated will need to fit the client, not the client the theory. The present volume is therefore written for scientist-practitioners, and those about to become one, who pursue two objectives: (1) learn or differentiate at least one method of case formulation in depth, in order to optimally understand and treat clients with personality disorders; (2) become aware of the possible limitations this particular methodology pertains facing a client with PD and complete with alternative methodologies. As such, the leading descriptor of the present volume ‘integrative’ means a continual creative process marked by a ‘sense of surprise and eagerness to learn’ (Safran & Messer, 1997), as opposed to a finished product ready to be applied. Case formulation methodology is therefore a practice-based way of psychotherapy integration, while at the same time offering tools learnable for any practitioner who does not necessarily practice psychotherapy in the narrower sense. Understanding a client’s disruptive experience may be a human endeavour independent from the fact whether or not the professional has a full training in an evidence-based psychotherapy for treating PD. Finally, this book is written for psychotherapy researchers who are willing to tackle complex problems of methodology, for example assessing the therapist responsiveness to clients’ characteristics or studying the process of change in individualized treatments.
CASE FORMULATION AS A MEANS TO INCREASE THERAPIST EFFECTIVENESS Case formulation may be part of the content of a variable which has been under-studied in psychotherapy research: the person of the therapist (Castonguay & Hill, 2017). The methodology used by a therapist to
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understand a client’s situation might be an indispensable building block to understanding therapist effects in psychotherapy. Individualizing psychotherapy based on a rigorous, well thought-through, method, or treatment plan, may strengthen the therapist’s technical and relational competencies in session, beyond an intuitive approach. From this perspective, the virtues of case formulation methodology are possibly (1) providing the therapist with a structure enabling to explain seemingly contradictory clinical (client and therapist) manifestations and experiences, (2) a systematic help to create a shared treatment focus, (3) a theory-building creative process aiming at integrative practice of psychotherapy, (4) its content can be used directly for the therapeutic interaction with the client (i.e., discuss the contents explicitly with the client) and (5) its content can be used for implicitly anticipating and adjusting relationship offer in a responsive manner (i.e., implicitly use the contents in the therapeutic interaction). All these virtues may be essential components for the quality of psychotherapy collaboration, the process and outcome. Case formulation appears as a specific process, or therapist activity, which takes place in interaction with technical and/or relationship manifestations in session. Case formulation appears to be central not only in the therapy hour, but also outside the therapy hour, as part of (1) the therapist reflective activity on the case, (2) the supervision process, (3) the accreditation process of therapists-intraining, (4) the legal and insurance context in which the treatment takes place, and (5) research (i.e., single case research). The therapist activity of formulation takes place in an – emerging – dyadic relationship, the one between the client and the therapist, and specific contents of formulation may be affected by this relationship. Also, the therapist, by formulating a case, may be in an ethical dilemma between the aim of providing to the client a precise explanation of a problem – which inevitably includes inference – and the aim of transparent communication with the client. The higher the level of inference of the explanation, the stronger the therapist will be in this ethical dilemma. The therapist may consider to what extent it is ethically acceptable to shield the client off from information related to a case formulation? Which information from the case formulation can easily be shared and which information should be considered with more caution? Some of these questions may be addressed in the present volume.
THE PRESENT VOLUME Each of the 18 chapter authors, and author groups, were asked to answer the following questions in their contribution: (1) What are the theoretical concepts that pertain to this case formulation method? (2) How does a scientist-practitioner go by to formulate a case according to this case
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formulation method? (3) How does this case formulation method plays out in a case with PD, and how did the case formulation affect the process and outcome in this treatment? The authors were also asked, if applicable, to review research carried out using this case formulation method and other additional topics which seemed relevant to them. The opening chapters concern the tailoring of brand-name, and to various extents evidence-based, psychotherapy approaches, to the individual client. Two chapters concern case formulation methods applied in specific contexts (i.e., contextual constraints): to youth and to the forensic context. The book ends with a focus on psychotherapy process variables used as information for case formulation. I would like to ask for the reader’s compassionate forgiveness: no volume can include it all, nor discuss all case formulation methods that exist for personality disorders. I would like to thank the 41 contributors for a truly inspiring cooperation and Barbara Makinster, Nikki Levy and Dennis McGonagle at Elsevier, Cambridge, MA, USA, for their proficient support through the process of publication. Special thanks to Mary C. Zanarini for writing the foreword to this book. Warm thank you to all – family, friends, colleagues and students – for being there, and for being a continuous source of inspiration of my work.
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Dimaggio, G., & Brüne, M. (2016). Dysfunctional understanding of mental states in personality disorders: What is the evidence? Comprehensive Psychiatry, 64, 1–3. Dixon-Gordon, K. L., Peters, J. R., Fertuck, E. A., & Yen, S. (2017). Emotional processes in borderline personality disorder: An update for clinical practice. Journal of Psychotherapy Integration, 27(4), 425–438. Drapeau, M., Perry, J. C., & Koerner, A. (2012). Intepersonal patterns in borderline personality disorder. Journal of Personality Disorders, 26(4), 583–592. Dudley, R., Ingham, B., Sowerby, K., & Freeston, M. (2015). The utility of case formulation in treatment decision making: The effect of experience and expertise. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 48, 66–74. Ebner-Priemer, U. W., Kuo, J., Kleindienst, N., Welch, S. S., Reisch, T., Reinhard, I., et al. (2007). State affective instability in borderline personality disorder assessed by ambulatory monitoring. Psychological Medicine, 37(7), 961–970. Edwards, A. W. (1982). The consequences of error in selecting treatment for blacks. Social Casework: The Journal of Contemporary Social Work, 63, 429–433. Eells, T. D. (2007). History and current status of psychotherapy case formulation. In T. D. Eells (Ed.), Handbook of psychotherapy case formulation (2nd ed.) (pp. 3–32). New York: Guilford. Eells, T. D. (2013a). The case formulation approach to psychotherapy research revisited. Pragmatic Case Studies in Psychotherapy, 9, 426–447. Eells, T. D. (2013b). In support of evidence-based case formulation in psychotherapy (from the perspective of a clinician). Pragmatic Case Studies in Psychotherapy, 9(4), 457–467. Eells, T. D., Lombart, K. G., Kendjelic, E. M., Turner, L. C., & Lucas, C. P. (2005). The quality of psychotherapy case formulations : A comparison of expert, experienced, and novice cognitive-behavioral and psychodynamic therapists. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 73(4), 579–589. Eikenaes, I., Pederson, G., & Wilberg, T. (2016). Attachment styles in patients wit avoidant personality disorder compared with social phobia. Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 89, 245–260. Fishman, D. B., & Edwards, D. J. A. (2017). The terrain. In D. B. Fishman, S. B. Messer, D. J. A. Edwards, & F. M. Dattilio (Eds.), Case Studies within Psychotherapy Trials (pp. 3–25). New York: Oxford University Press. Fonagy, P., Leigh, T., Steele, M., Steele, H., Kennedy, R., Mattoon, G., et al. (1996). The relation of attachment status, psychiatric classification, and response to psychotherapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 64(1), 22–31. Gigerenzer, G., & Brighton, H. (2011). Homo heuristicus: Why biased minds make better inferences. In G. Gigerenzer, R. Hertwig, & T. Pachur (Eds.), Heuristics. The foundations of adaptive behavior (pp. 2–30). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Gill, M., Newman, R., & Redlich, F. C. (1954). The initial interview in psychiatric practice. New York: International Universities Press. Goldfried, M. R. (2010). The future of psychotherapy integration: Closing the gap between research and practice. Journal of Psychotherapy Integration, 20, 386–396. Goldfried, M. R., & Pomeranz, D. M. (1968). Role of assessment in behavior modification. Psychological Reports, 23, 75–87. Goldman, R., & Greenberg, L. S. (2015). Case formulation in emotion-focused therapy. Co-creating clinical maps for change. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association. Hart, S., Sturmey, P., Logan, C., & McMurran, M. (2011). Forensic case formulation. International Journal of Forensic Mental Health, 10(2), 118–126. Herpertz, S. C., Huprich, S. K., Bohus, M., Chanen, A., Goodman, M., Mehlum, L., et al. (2017). The challenge of transforming the diagnostic system of personality disorders. Journal of Personality Disorders, 31(5), 577–589. Herpertz, S. C., Nagy, K., Ueltzhöffer, K., Schmitt, R., Mancke, F., Schmahl, C., et al. (2017). Brain mechanisms underlying aggression in borderline personality disorder – sex matters. Biological Psychiatry, 82, 257–266.
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Schmahl, C., Herpertz, S. C., Bertsch, K., Ende, G., Flor, H., Kirsch, P., et al. (2014). Mechanisms of disturbed emotion processing and social interaction in borderline personality disorder: State of knowledge and research agenda of the German clinical research unit. Borderline Personality Disorder and Emotion Dysregulation, 1, 12. Schulze, L., Schmahl, C., & Niedtfeld, I. (2016). Neural correlates of disturbed emotion processing in borderline personality disorder: A multimodal meta-analysis. Biological Psychiatry, 79(2), 97–106. Sharp, C., Venta, A., Vanwoerden, S., Schramm, A., Ha, C., Newlin, E., et al. (2016). First empirical evaluation of the link between attachment, social cognition and borderline features in adolescents. Comprehensive Psychiatry, 64, 4–11. Spinhoven, P., Bamelis, L., Molendijk, M., Haringsma, R., & Arntz, A. (2009). Reduced specificity of autobiographical memory in Cluster C personality disorders and the role of depression, worry and experiential avoidance. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 118, 520– 530. https://doi.org/10.1037/a00162393. Startup, M., Heard, H., Swales, M., Jones, B., Williams, J. M., & Jones, R. S. (2001). Autobiographical memory and para-suicide in borderline personality disorder. The British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 40, 113–120. https://doi.org/10.1348/014466501163535. Sturmey, P. (2009). Varieties of case formulation. Chichester: Wiley. Tarrier, N. (2006). An introduction to case formulation and its challenges. In N. Tarrier (Ed.), Case formulation in cognitive behaviour therapy (pp. 1–11). London: Routledge. Vater, A., Ritter, K., Schröder-Abé, M., Schütz, A., Lammers, C. H., Bosson, J. K., et al. (2013). When grandiosity and vulnerability collide: Implicit and explicit self-esteem in patients with narcissistic personality disorder. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 44(1), 37–47. Vater, A., Schröder-Abé, M., Weissgerber, S., Roepke, S., & Schütz, A. (2015). Self-concept structure and borderline personality disorder: Evidence for negative compartmentalization. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 46, 50–58. Veen, G., & Arntz, A. (2000). Multidimensional dichotomous thinking characterizes borderline personality disorder. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 24(1), 23–45. Vollmer, S., Spada, H., Caspar, F., & Burri, S. (2013). Expertise in clinical psychology. The effects of university training and practical experience on expertise in clinical psychology. Frontiers in Psychology, 4(141). Westen, D., & Cohen, R. P. (1993). The self in borderline personality disorder: A psychodynamic perspective. In Z. V. Segal, & S. J. Blatt (Eds.), The self in emotional distress. Cognitive and psychodynamic perspectives (pp. 334–360). New York: Guilford. Widiger, T. A. (2018). Official classification systems. In W. J. Livesley, & R. Larstone (Eds.), Handbook of personality disorders (2nd ed.) (pp. 47–71). New York: Guilford Press. Zanarini, M. C. (2005). The subsyndromal phenomenology of borderline personality disorder. In M. C. Zanarini (Ed.), Borderline personality disorder (pp. 19–40). Boca Raton, FL: Taylor & Francis. Zufferey, P., Caspar, F., & Kramer, U. (2018). The role of interactional agreeableness in responsive treatments for patients with borderline personality disorder. Journal of Personality Disorders.
C H A P T E R
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Case Formulation in Dialectical Behaviour Therapy Shelley McMain1,2, Michelle Leybman1, Tali Boritz1,2 1Centre
for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada; of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
2Department
INTRODUCTION Dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT) is an evidence-based form of psychotherapy that can be used to treat individuals with severe emotional and behavioural dysregulation. While it is widely implemented, DBT—like all psychotherapies—is not one-size-fits-all, and its effectiveness hinges on the ability of the clinician to tailor the treatment for each client. Case formulation, a method for personalizing psychotherapy, is considered essential for effective implementation of DBT, and is a core competency for DBT certification (see https://dbt-lbc.org/). In real-world settings, however, for a variety of reasons, many practitioners are neither well informed about case formulation, nor well trained in its implementation. It has been observed that clinicians often come to appreciate the value of this process once it becomes clear to them how it can be used to coordinate treatment and improve outcomes in complex cases (Davidson, 2006; Hart, Sturmey, Logan, & McMurran, 2011). The preparation of a case formulation is especially important when working with clients with personality disorders (Davidson, 2006). First, such individuals often have multiple co-morbid problems, which makes it difficult for clinicians to know where to focus any interventions. Further, clients who are highly emotionally and behaviourally dysregulated are likely to become emotionally aroused and reactive in session, which can cause the clinician to feel confused or overwhelmed and may contribute to countertherapeutic reactions. A sound case formulation helps the
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© 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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therapist understand the client better, thereby allowing for accurate empathy and validation, which in turn promotes collaboration and strengthens the therapeutic alliance. Finally, understanding a client’s patterns of thinking, feeling, and acting improves the therapist’s ability to anticipate challenges and to determine how and when to effectively intervene. As with other therapeutic approaches, case formulation in DBT is both a process and a product. As a process, case formulation acts as a systematic method of organizing complex and diverse clinical information into clear and meaningful explanations which provide both therapist and client with an awareness and understanding of what and how to change. Like a GPS device, it provides information about the starting point (the target problems), the endpoint (the desired outcomes), and a suggested route (the treatment plan). It maps out the client’s psychological condition, which issues to prioritize, hypotheses about how the client will respond to suitable interventions, and ideas on how to evaluate the impact of interventions (Logan, Nathan, & Brown, 2011). This map can then be turned into a product, such as a written document that can be referred to throughout treatment and shared with the client. DBT case formulation integrates theory and research (i.e., what we understand broadly about a particular condition or a certain type of human behaviour) to create a specific and idiographic understanding of each client, including how to effectively navigate the therapeutic process. In keeping with the GPS metaphor, we may have in mind a route to get from Point A to Point B but will need to change course if we encounter unexpected road closures or particularly rough pavement. As with the practice of DBT overall, case formulation is a transparent and collaborative process between therapist and client, and is discussed explicitly throughout the course of treatment. The process of generating a case formulation in DBT, which begins within the first few sessions, involves five essential steps (Koerner & Linehan, 1997). First, the therapist gathers information about the biological and environmental factors that have contributed to the development and maintenance of the client’s mental state. Second, the client’s goals are identified, and treatment targets are specified and prioritized. Third, the function of specific behaviours and the variables that control these behaviours are assessed, primarily through the method of behavioural chain analyses. Fourth, data collected from behavioural chain analyses are synthesized across behaviours to identify common themes relevant to the client’s mental functioning. Finally, suitable interventions are selected to address these common problematic themes. This chapter provides an overview of case formulation in DBT. It begins by describing the theories that underpin DBT, and then presents a detailed explanation of each of the five steps for generating a case formulation, using a case history to illustrate each step.
Theoretical Foundation of Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)
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THEORETICAL FOUNDATION OF DIALECTICAL BEHAVIOUR THERAPY (DBT) Learning Theory An assumption in DBT is that all behaviours develop through a complex interplay of biological and environmental factors that are governed by the laws of learning: antecedent stimuli precede a behaviour (classical conditioning), and consequential stimuli follow it (operant conditioning). Modelling plays a role as well. The variables that control (i.e., cause or maintain) problematic behaviours therefore become the target of intervention. For a review of the behaviour therapy approach, see Goldfried and Davison (1994). In keeping with the above, the development of a case formulation is based on a learning theory perspective, and involves a problem-solving approach to identify the stimulus-response relationship associated with problematic behaviours. Behavioural strategies are used to assess both the classical conditioning links in the sequence of events leading up to a behaviour (e.g., cognitions, actions, emotions) and the operant conditioning links that follow that behaviour (i.e., the contingencies that reinforce or punish it) (Swales & Heard, 2017). From a DBT perspective, the therapist is encouraged to contemplate the function of behaviours. For example, one common assumption is that dysfunctional behaviour is motivated by urges to achieve ‘amelioration of unendurable pain’ (Linehan, 1993a,b, p. 265).
Zen Philosophy DBT focuses on both change and acceptance. The part of DBT that focuses on change is based on learning theory, whereas the emphasis on acceptance is anchored in Eastern mindfulness; specifically, Zen philosophy. The present moment is considered inevitable given the ‘collective impact of all previous moments’ (Swenson, 2016, p. 46). That is, all behaviour that happens should happen, and is understandable (Linehan, 1997). The DBT concept of ‘wise mind’ refers to a state of balance between viewing the world rationally and viewing it emotionally, sometimes experienced as a ‘gut feeling’ about the best course of action to take. Following these Zen principles, a therapeutic stance of acceptance and nonjudgment guides the process of developing an explanatory theory of a client’s problems, and the therapist seeks to discover how these problems are perfectly understandable in context of the client’s biology, history, and current reality. The concept of wise mind informs the process through which the therapist seeks to clarify and identify the wisdom in the client’s responses or behaviours.
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Dialectical Philosophy The dialectical perspective in DBT adopts a holistic understanding of the client. Dialectical philosophy posits that reality is composed of interrelated parts that cannot be defined without reference to the system as a whole. The system and its parts are in a constant state of flux, and changes in one part of the system influence changes in the others. Dialectical philosophy also emphasizes the understanding that reality consists of opposites or polarities. Tensions or polarizations in thinking, feeling, and acting are seen to naturally arise. This natural tension between opposites is resolved through a process of synthesis. This perspective influences the development of a case formulation in several ways. We seek a systemic and contextual understanding of the client, taking both emotional aspects and the external environment into account. A DBT therapist considers how polarizations in thoughts, feelings, or actions contribute to problematic behaviour, and determines how to identify polarizations when these occur and how to target them for intervention. As the process of change involves the synthesis of opposites, when selecting interventions there is usually a focus on helping the client move either toward acceptance or toward change.
Biosocial Theory The biosocial theory of DBT posits that the core dysfunction underlying borderline personality disorder and certain other clinical disorders is pervasive emotion dysregulation, which arises from the combination of a biological predisposition toward emotional vulnerability and an invalidating developmental environment (Linehan, 1993a). Emotional vulnerability refers to experiencing heightened sensitivity to emotions, heightened reactivity, and a slow return to baseline. An invalidating environment refers to an environment that minimizes, ignores, dismisses, or punishes the expression of emotion, thereby communicating to a person that his or her understanding of events and internal experiences are fundamentally wrong and are due to unacceptable and socially undesirable character traits. When biological emotional vulnerability is combined with an invalidating interpersonal environment, people may fail to learn how to understand, label, modulate, and tolerate emotional distress, or how to solve the problems contributing to their emotional reactions (Linehan, 1993a,b; McMain, Korman, & Dimeff, 2001). Instead, they learn to manage their emotional vulnerabilities through maladaptive strategies. In case formulation, biosocial theory is used to construct a developmental explanation for emotion dysregulation and associated problems. Based on the information gathered when obtaining a developmental history, we are able to begin making hypotheses about how a particular client is coping with emotions in the present.
STEP-BY STEP APPROACH TO DEVELOPING A DBT CASE FORMULATION
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STEP-BY STEP APPROACH TO DEVELOPING A DIALECTICAL BEHAVIOUR THERAPY (DBT) CASE FORMULATION The five steps involved in developing a case formulation are detailed below, using a case study to illustrate each step.
Step 1: Obtain a Developmental History Starting at the first session, gather historical information to help understand how the client experiences, modulates, and expresses emotions. The types of information include relationships with significant family members (parents, siblings) as well as with peers. Assess for any events of childhood abuse, neglect, and bullying, as well as for the environmental response to any disclosures of traumatic experiences. Assess for evidence of biologically based emotional vulnerability. Was the client a sensitive child, or described as such by others? Emotional vulnerability may include shyness, anxiety, temper tantrums, or other sensitivities to the environment. Assessing for family history of mental health and substance use disorders or other psychological difficulties can also provide valuable information. Assess for evidence of invalidation in the developmental environment, with specific questions about what messages were received about emotion. For example, when the client became emotional in childhood, what were the responses from caregivers, teachers, and peers? Were normative emotional behaviours ignored or punished? Determine how the environment responded to signs of distress or struggle. For example, did parents, other family members, or teachers provide support, or did they oversimplify what was needed to solve the problem? Identify the transactions between biologically based emotional vulnerability and the invalidating environment. How did the client regulate emotions as a child: i.e., what strategies did he or she learn in order to modulate and express emotions and to get emotional needs met? For example, some children who are punished for displays of emotion learn to mask their emotions or to isolate themselves when they are emotionally dysregulated, whereas others learn to intensify their emotional displays in order to elicit a desired response from caregivers.
The Case of Beth: Overview and Application to Step 1 Beth, a 35-year-old woman with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder (BPD), self-referred to an outpatient BPD treatment programme clinic due to difficulties in several areas of her life, and received one year of standard DBT. Her presenting symptoms included frequent self-harm: she
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was engaging in cutting herself several times a week, would punch herself, and would overdose on pain medication. She also drank alcohol excessively, struggled to hold steady employment, and had frequent ‘blowouts’ with her partner, with whom she had been living for two years. She reported intense and chronic anxiety, extreme self-criticism, and strong feelings of self-hatred. In addition to being diagnosed with BPD, her pretreatment assessment identified co-morbid Major Depressive Disorder, Social Phobia, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Alcohol Dependence, and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Assessment of the origins of Beth’s emotional vulnerability began at the first orientation session. Invalidating experiences had been pervasive in her early interpersonal environment. Her biological father had left within the first year of her birth and was not in touch with anyone in the family thereafter. Beth said she often believed she was not good enough for him to stick around for. Her mother remarried when Beth was three, and when her stepfather and three stepsisters became part of the family, she had a strong feeling of being ‘an outsider’. This was highlighted by her stepfather frequently requesting to take two sets of pictures at family gatherings; one that included her and one that did not. Of the four children, she was identified as ‘the sensitive one in the bunch’. She described crying often, as well as losing her temper frequently both at school and at home. She remembered feeling ‘out of control’ much of the time and being ganged up upon by her siblings for being ‘such a crybaby’. Beth received overt messages that her emotions were ‘too much’ for the rest of her family. For example, when she cried she would frequently be told something like ‘suck it up, buttercup’. When she got angry, she was often sent to her room and told that she could rejoin the family when she got control of herself. There was a significant interaction at play between Beth’s biological sensitivity and her invalidating environment. Beth’s sensitivity meant that she experienced a sense of intense abandonment and rejection much of the time, and any time that she expressed her thoughts about this, the invalidating reactions from her family created new reasons to feel even more of those intense feelings of hurt. Importantly, the only time that Beth ever felt any kind of reassurance or validation was when she had her biggest ‘crying fits’. At these times, her mother, who herself was diagnosed with BPD, seemed to recognize herself in her daughter and would become more soothing than usual. This reinforced Beth’s belief that getting visibly and highly upset about something was the best way to be heard by others.
Step 2: Identifying and Prioritizing Treatment Targets A major challenge for most psychotherapists is to be able to appreciate the complexity of a client while simultaneously distilling what is occurring in a session moment-by-moment. To do so, they must alternate between a broad, macrolevel focus on treatment targets (e.g., abstinence
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from substances, improving relationships) and a more specific, microlevel focus on emotions and patterns of emotional processing (e.g., hint of frustration in tone of voice, eyes shimmering with tears, emotion inhibition). Vision for Life In DBT, treatment is geared toward helping people attain their life goals; thus, those goals are the foundations of the case formulation. Encouraging a conversation about what the client wants out of life may be an unexpected way to begin therapy, as many people enter therapy holding views of themselves as broken or damaged and feel hopeless about the prospect of life ever being different. Problems often dominate the landscape and can overshadow any positive aspirations. Probing about hopes and aspirations can help generate motivation to engage in treatment. Reminders about life goals are often returned to in therapy, especially when a client loses hope and motivation. Helping people hold onto a new vision of a new life can help anchor the treatment and mobilize them toward new possibilities. To identify a client’s life goals, the therapist may begin with a question such as, ‘If treatment could help you build the life that you want, what would your life look like?’ It may be helpful to use a metaphor of a paradise island, asking the client to describe as fully as possible what such an island would look like and what it would include. Primary Treatment Targets: Macrolevel Behaviours Once the client’s aspirations are clarified, the next step is to sort out what is getting in the way of achieving them. Sometimes clients are well aware of their problematic behaviours; for example, knowing that anger outbursts are interfering with interpersonal relationships and with maintaining a job. Other problems may be less obvious, and may be uncovered over the course of treatment: for example, being unaware that problematic shame is underlying the anger outbursts. During the first few sessions of treatment, the clinician sifts through information and identifies the difficulties that the client is struggling with. Next, the therapist works to convert the client’s goals into specific problems to be addressed in treatment. Lists of such problems, referred to as treatment targets, are established early in therapy and become a focus of assessment and intervention. Clear and specific identification of behaviours that are to be eliminated and behaviours that are to be increased make the goals concrete and easier to move toward. Treatment must match the client’s motivation, as people are not necessarily motivated to address all the behaviours that are compromising their life goals. For example, someone engaging in self-destructive substance use may be unwilling to give this up. No matter how sincere the therapist’s conviction about the path a client ‘ought’ to take and how strong
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the attempts to steer that person in a certain direction, it is ultimately the client’s responsibility to make these choices. In the words of Dr. Seuss, ‘You’re on your own / And you know what you know / And you are the one who’ll decide where to go’. Finally, it is important to consider the timeframe of treatment and to focus on goals that can be reasonably addressed within a specific period of time. Establishing a timeframe helps to mobilize the client and decreases the likelihood of issues being avoided, and also helps to provide a metric to gauge progress toward goals. Secondary Treatment Targets: Microlevel Behaviours DBT is particularly concerned with emotions, so observable patterns of problematic emotion processes are a focus at a microlevel of analysis and intervention. Microlevel moment-by-moment changes in a client’s in-session behaviours, including voice tone, facial expressions, body language, and respiratory rate, can reveal emotions and level of arousal. Markers of emotional processing problems are critical to consider when deciding where to focus and intervene. Linehan identified three problematic patterns of emotion regulation characterized by an opposing tendency to over- and underregulate emotions. Referred to as secondary targets, these involve dialectical dilemmas across three dimensions: (1) modulation of emotions, (2) expression of emotional needs, and (3) avoidance of grief and pain. When developing a case formulation, it is critical to identify in-session markers of patterns of emotion processing difficulties that take one of these forms.
• E motion modulation problems are characterized by the vacillation between emotion vulnerability and self-invalidation. Emotion vulnerability refers to an individual’s sensitivity to emotional arousal, susceptibility to negative emotion, and challenges controlling intense emotional reactions. Behavioural markers include intense overwhelming emotions, often involving rage reactions. In contrast, self-invalidation refers to an individual’s tendency to overcontrol emotions. Markers of self-invalidation include the suppression, inhibition, and dismissal of emotional experience such as selfcriticism, self-attack, physical tightening and squeezing back bodily expressions, and dissociating. • Difficulties around expressing emotional needs are characterized by a vacillation between active passivity and apparent competence. Active passivity is the tendency to approach life’s problems helplessly with the expectation that others will solve one’s problems. Apparent competence involves a masking of emotional distress in such a way that others do not perceive one’s level of distress or need for assistance.
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• A voidance of grief or trauma is characterized by a vacillation between unrelenting crises and inhibited grieving. Unrelenting crisis refers to a constant stream of stressful life events or episodes of behavioural dyscontrol (e.g., suicide attempts, substance abuse, and other impulsive behaviours). This problem reflects a tendency to be controlled by aversive emotions and an inability to tolerate reactions to events, but also results when a persistent suppression of emotion erupts to the surface (Swenson, 2016). In contrast, inhibited grieving is the tendency to suppress or avoid painful emotions associated with grief and trauma. Markers of inhibited grieving may include an absence of emotional reactions to loss or ending (e.g., treatment termination, therapist vacation), and an avoidance of cues that trigger loss (e.g., premature withdrawal from treatment). Treatment Focus When treating a client with multidisorders, it can be challenging for the clinician to know what to focus on and how to prioritize problems. In developing a DBT case formulation, the first consideration is a macrolevel assessment of the client’s level of severity and emotional capacities. Clients with significant behavioural dyscontrol, including suicidal and self-harm behaviours, substance use, anger outbursts, or eating disorders, are considered to be in Stage 1 of treatment, in which the main goal is to facilitate the development of basic emotional regulation capacities. Increasing the ability to modulate behaviours that are associated with intense emotions is the most critical target of this stage. Clients who are less behaviourally dysregulated are deemed to be in Stage 2. In Stage 2, the focus of intervention shifts to enhancing and processing deeper emotional experiences. Thus, an individual who is suicidal but capable of not acting on suicidal urges may be ready to begin focusing on emotional non-avoidance, including the treatment of trauma and post-traumatic stress reactions. The hierarchy of treatment targets in DBT provides a map for determining the focus in each therapy session. While each session typically focuses on multiple problems, primary targets are organized in terms of a hierarchy of priority focus. Suicidal and life-threatening behaviours are prioritized over other behaviours for obvious reasons. Next are behaviours that interfere with receiving treatment, since these need to be overcome if treatment is to be maximally effective. Such behaviours include missing sessions, showing up late for sessions, and being intoxicated in session. They can also include problems on the part of the therapist, such as anger toward a client, fragilizing a client, or lateness to sessions. Next to be targeted are behaviours that comprise a client’s quality of life, such as substance use, homelessness, eating disorders, and lack of productive activity. Finally, the therapist must carefully observe the client’s level of emotional arousal during sessions in order to determine the most optimal
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direction for intervention. For example, there may have been a plan to address the client’s drug use, but while exploring the factors that led up to that problem, the client becomes emotionally aroused and angry due to being in a state of emotional vulnerability. At this point, it may be most productive to shift the focus away from the drug use and onto this emotional vulnerability to help the client reregulate. In other cases, the level of emotional arousal may be too low and may need to be heightened, such as when a client exhibits ‘apparent competence’ as described earlier.
The Case of Beth: Application to Step 2 Beth arrived at her first session with a list of vague goals such as ‘I want to feel better’ and ‘I want to love myself’. In DBT, the first four sessions are typically considered a pretreatment phase in which the focus is on orienting the client to treatment, bolstering commitment and motivation, and identifying clear and specific goals, In Beth’s case, much of the time was spent on specifying her goals and problems. In terms of aspirations, she expressed a desire for a career in childcare, a stable relationship and a family, ownership of a pet, and being a better model of emotion regulation for her future children than her mother had been for her. Beth was highly motivated to improve her relationship with her partner and expressed fear and ambivalence about her ability to control her destructive behaviours. She was, however, afraid of discussing past traumatic experiences. The therapist agreed that at this stage, attempts to reprocess trauma would likely intensify Beth’s emotions and possibly exacerbate further behavioural dysregulation. Accordingly, it was collaboratively decided to prioritize working on the self-harm behaviours, and to address the processing of trauma only once there was an improvement in behavioural control. Whenever Beth expressed ambivalence about treatment, the therapist would refocus on her desire to have a stable relationship and a family. In setting goals, these aspirations were used as a starting point for discussions around what Beth’s behaviours would look like once her relationship had improved. The discussion frequently came back to the problems getting in the way of Beth’s having a career and a family, and it became apparent that avoidance played a significant role. The most common reason for her being fired from jobs was a failure to show up, a behaviour that was precipitated by emotional distress following a fight with her partner. While reducing anger outbursts with her partner was a goal, it was also important to increase Beth’s ability to not ‘drop everything’ when conflicts did occur. It emerged that Beth frequently ate only one meal per day and slept only four to five hours per night, and it became evident that she was particularly prone to behavioural dysregulation when she was hungry and tired. Because her poor self-care was often prompting self-harm and anger
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outbursts, improvements in her sleeping and eating habits were identified as treatment targets. By the end of the pretreatment orientation phase, Beth had established the following primary treatment targets: (1) eliminate self-harm behaviours; (2) eliminate angry outbursts; (3) limit alcoholic drinks to three in one sitting (no more than 1 oz per drink when it was a mixed drink); (4) sleep eight hours per night; (5) eat three meals per day; and (6) decrease avoidance of commitments. A diary card was developed so that she could track these primary targets and her emotions. With respect to secondary targets, Beth exhibited clear markers for emotional vulnerability and self-invalidation. She presented as highly anxious in session, and frequently avoided eye contact with the therapist when discussing anything that triggered shame, which was almost everything. She apologized constantly while she was expressing being in distress, and used many phrases like ‘I’m so stupid’. She also presented with the dialectical dilemma of apparent competence and active passivity, oscillating between stating that she didn’t need help and that everything was fine, to indicating in the diary card that she was having anger outbursts at her partner almost every day. She typically avoided fully filling in the diary card on weeks when she self-harmed. Related to her secondary targets, treatment focused on increasing self-validation, letting go of self-criticism, and increasing direct communication about her need for help.
Step 3: Analyzing Factors Controlling Behaviours An essential step in developing a case formulation entails identifying the issues controlling problematic behaviours so that suitable interventions can be selected. From a DBT perspective, all behaviours are considered to serve a function, so identifying the function of a behaviour is critical to changing it. An assessment of the function of a behaviour requires a behavioural assessment of the stimulus-response associations. The daily diary cards are reviewed at each treatment session and are used to identify relevant primary problems that warrant attention. The use of diary cards helps to increase a client’s awareness of thoughts, emotions, and actions, and the interrelationships between these variables and patterns of behaviours. Target behaviours, both primary and secondary, are analyzed using the technique of behavioural chain analysis, which involves a detailed assessment of a specific instance of a type of behaviour. Either the client attempts to vividly recall a particular event (whether recent or past), or an instance of this type of behaviour is examined in-session as it arises in the moment. Data on controlling stimuli are collected and examined in an effort to determine the interrelationship and temporal sequencing (from the beginning to the end) of the stimuli controlling the behaviour.
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Rather than a ‘cold’ cognitive processing of the events associated with a behaviour, the therapist attempts to stimulate an emotionally evocative analysis of behaviour, since cognitive processing and memories are positively impacted by arousal. Several critical elements are highlighted through the process of a chain analysis. First, a specific instance of the target behaviour is identified, or a precise description of it (details, intensity, and duration) is obtained. Following this, the event (whether internal or external) that prompted or set off the behaviour is uncovered. Next, the factors that made the person vulnerable to the behaviour occurring are considered. A detailed, temporal fine-grained analysis is conducted to assess the thoughts, emotions, actions, and environmental events leading up to the behaviour. Subsequently, the consequences of the behaviour are identified. Ultimately, all the variables controlling a problem are identified: these typically reflect a combination of skills deficit, contingency problems, cognitive dysfunction, and/or problematic emotions (Koerner, 2012). The therapist must probe for information that is not disclosed or that may be outside of the client’s conscious awareness. For example, a client who reports having had no feelings of hurt after receiving critical feedback might be asked whether there had been any experience of bodily sensations associated with emotions; or a client who has completed three months of skills training yet still reports engaging in self-harm behaviour in response to intense painful emotions might be asked what is getting in the way of using the acquired skills in distress tolerance. A poorly constructed case formulation that is based on a limited understanding of the controlling variables can impede rather than advance treatment progress. Common problems in the analysis include the mistargeting of problems and overlooking important information about controlling variables. Another concern is the failure to identify the primary mechanism underlying the function of the problem behaviour. For example, if angry outbursts are providing an escape from inhibited grief, then helping the client accept and process the grief will be essential for resolving this behaviour. Focusing on the anger behaviours alone will be insufficient.
Case of Beth: Application to Step 3 Early in treatment with Beth, almost every session included a behavioural analysis (BA) to understand the functions of her target behaviours. Most often, the focus of these BAs were on analyzing self-harm incidents, excessive drinking, missing sessions, or avoiding filling in the diary card. The following describes a BA that focused on a self-harm incident. According to Beth, the prompting event for this incident was that following an argument with her partner over the cleanliness of their apartment, he told her that he was unsure if he would be comfortable having
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children with her. This comment led her to a series of linked thoughts such as, ‘I’m not good enough’ and ‘no one will ever want me’, and her sense of shame skyrocketed and quickly turned into anger toward both him and herself. Importantly, when she became aware of her anger, she tried several strategies to address it, telling her partner that he shouldn’t say things like that during a fight, and attempting to self-validate her feelings of anger. She did not, however, do anything to regulate her shame; on the contrary, she told herself that she deserved to feel ashamed because she was a ‘terrible person’. She then went into the bathroom, took a pair of manicure scissors, and used them to cut both of her legs superficially. She did not tell her partner what she had done, but her feelings of shame decreased and she cleaned the wounds, thus providing herself with a small amount of compassion. When first going over the BA, Beth was unaware of any other thoughts that had led her to this act of self-harm. The therapist urged her to consider that many people can have thoughts of being a ‘terrible person’ without proceeding to hurt themselves. Together with the therapist, Beth came to understand that she had also been having the thought that the shame was intolerable and she ‘needed to get rid of it’. That was the link that led her to the bathroom, the place where she often cut herself, and once there she did not attempt to use any other coping skills. After determining the links in the chain, the therapist attempted to analyze whether anything had made Beth particularly vulnerable that day. Beth revealed that she had had only one meal, that her boss had criticized her at work, and that when she got home, to help herself feel better about her boss’s comments, she drank five drinks, which she had not recorded in her diary card. Table 1.1 provides a summary of this BA.
Step 4: Observing Patterns Across Behaviours As behavioural chain analyses are repeated across similar and different classes of behaviours, recurring patterns will become apparent. The therapist must isolate the recurring cognitions, emotions, and actions that set off problematic behaviours, and then map out the relationship between these variables. Typical problematic patterns may be tied to similar behaviours, whereas other problematic patterns may distinguish other behaviours. For example, self-harm behaviour may be triggered by critical feedback and shame, while suicidal behaviour may be triggered by perceived loss and panic related to a sense of being alone. It is important to observe and highlight the recurring patterns as they arise within the therapy and the therapeutic relationship. Targeting common problematic patterns for intervention means that multiple symptoms can be addressed simultaneously. For example, a client with underlying maladaptive shame and an intense fear of
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TABLE 1.1 Summary of a Chain Analysis of Beth’s Self-Harm Episode Vulnerability Restricted eating. Criticized by boss.
Prompting Event Criticism from partner.
Links
Links
Behaviour
Consequence
Thoughts about not being good enough. Shame.
Thoughts about not being able to tolerate shame. Selfinvalidation of shame.
Cutting legs with manicure scissors.
Relief of shame. Took care of self by cleaning wounds.
abandonment may use drugs with his girlfriend because he is afraid that she will leave him. This same client may fail to complete therapy homework assignment and not fully engage in treatment because he views himself as incapable, and is also afraid that if he changes, the treatment will end and he will lose his relationship with his therapist. A therapist can identify maladaptive shame and avoidance of shame as a common link between the two problematic behaviours (drug use, failure to complete homework). Helping the client reduce his avoidance and decrease the intensity of shame will target both his drug use and his therapy-interfering behaviours. Over time, a case formulation uncovers the recurring common patterns seen in repeated behavioural chains, and these recurring patterns are targeted for intervention. Some responses will need to be strengthened, while others will need to be modified or replaced. Metaphors are particularly useful of summarizing patterns of behaviour in a way that is easier for clients to understand, and can help create some distance from the problem (Koerner, 2012).
Case of Beth: Application to Step 4 A common pattern that emerged with Beth was her avoidance of emotions, particularly her maladaptive shame. For example, she once arrived at a session without her diary card, and the BA revealed that she had not wanted to complete it because she had self-harmed that week and due to shame could not bring herself to look at the ‘yes’ in the self-harm column. The BAs that analyzed her frequent absences from work revealed that these stemmed from her not wanting people at her workplace to think she was doing a bad job. The BAs that analyzed her overdrinking showed that this was almost always prompted by perceived criticism from either her partner or her boss. In short, an avoidance of shame held clear links to all of Beth’s primary problems.
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Importantly, along with this avoidance came an exquisite sensitivity to shame. Beth felt shame even in neutral situations: e.g., if a stranger on the street asked her for the time, she would think they felt sorry for her and only asked her out of pity. Shame arose automatically across many situations. Her thinking would then immediately shift to wanting to avoid shame and, depending on what was around, she would use varying destructive means to escape these feelings: avoiding the situation, drinking, or self-harming. While the behaviours and the specific prompting events were different, her primary maladaptive shame and the desire to avoid it were underlying many of them. The therapist offered Beth the following metaphor to capture her sensitivity to shame: ‘The harsh criticism that you received as a child has left you like a burn victim, and when anything touches your wounds, it leaves you feeling seething pain’. Describing her shame in this way was less threatening to Beth and captured the intensity of her feelings. In keeping with this metaphor, the DBT skills that she was learning were likened to a healing ointment that would heal her burns.
Step 5: Identifying Interventions and Solutions The final task in the development of a case formulation involves specifying solutions to address specific behaviours. At this stage, the therapist needs to consider whether the client has the ability to engage in alternate behaviours. If the necessary skills seem to be present but the client is not implementing them, the obstacles to responding differently need to be determined. Usually, the impediment is coming from lack of commitment or motivation. The long-term and short-term benefits of different solutions must be considered so that the most effective alternate response can be selected. In the earlier example (see Step 2) of a client being unaware of problematic shame underlying explosive angry outbursts, the most effective short-term solution may be to help the client modulate this response and not act on anger urges; in the long term, the resolution of underlying maladaptive shame needs to be addressed. Ultimately, a case formulation links together several mini-treatment plans to address common problematic patterns of behaviour (Koerner, 2012). When selecting techniques to solve problematic behaviours, the therapist should consider the following guidelines:
• I n DBT, the focus is usually on helping clients move either toward acceptance or toward changing behaviour. • It is usually most productive to target problematic patterns as they arise in session and hence are emotionally alive. • It is important to monitor the client’s motivation and find out which areas he or she is willing to work on.
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• S evere or imminent behaviours are the most important to address. For example, if a client who wants to eliminate suicidal and self-harm behaviour reports to her therapist that she is holding on to her ‘suicide kit’ just in case things become very difficult, encouraging her to dispose of this kit is critical to the elimination of the behaviours. • Brainstorming solutions together serves to strengthen the client’s sense of mastery and active problem solving. The solutions selected should be considered in terms of both their short-term and long-term consequences. • Finally, it is important to consider how solutions will be implemented by the client in the real world, and to identify the barriers to implementation.
Case of Beth: Application to Step 5 Several variables were found to control Beth’s self-harm behaviours, drinking, and anger outbursts, including ones from the four general problem areas (e.g., skills deficit, contingency problems, cognitive dysfunction, and/or problematic emotions) With respect to skills deficits, Beth struggled to communicate effectively with her partner, and lacked both distress tolerance and emotion regulation skills. She attended a skills training group in order to learn these, and her therapist worked with her outside of the group, using role playing to further strengthen her ability to communicate more directly and effectively. Regarding contingencies or consequences of the behaviour, Beth’s partner had a pattern of giving into her demands when she had an angry outburst, which only reinforced them. He attended a family support group and received help in learning how to validate Beth when she was able to express herself effectively and to avoid reinforcing her angry outbursts. Beth also had several problematic cognitions that contributed to her behavioural dyscontrol. She would constantly think ‘I’m so stupid’ or ‘I’m not good enough’, and these thoughts were heightened in response to perceived criticism. She told herself frequently that she was a burden to others. The therapist used a variety of cognitive modification techniques to target these beliefs, such as mindfully observing her self-criticism and interrupting her judgements of herself. In addition, the therapist designed behavioural experiments that allowed Beth to check the facts related to her beliefs. For example, Beth’s belief that she was a burden would stop her from using the clinic’s pager system. The therapist encouraged her to experiment by using the pager service to see if the person who answered it acted in the ways that Beth would have predicted based on her belief. Perhaps the most important controlling variable in Beth’s case was her primary maladaptive shame. This was addressed using both formal and informal exposure procedures, paired with mindfulness of shame.
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In-session work played an important role, as this was the time when Beth was most able to tolerate experiencing shame. When she would show markers of shame such as avoiding eye contact, the therapist would gently name it or ask whether a sense of shame was coming up and would guide Beth to describe the experience. Beth began to understand that her shame was not as dangerous to her as she had once thought.
CONCLUDING REMARKS This chapter portrays the practice of case formulation in DBT, describing the underlying core theories (Zen philosophy, learning theory, dialectical philosophy, and biosocial theory) and summarizing the key steps involved. The development of a sound case formulation is essential to the effective implementation of DBT, and the hope is that the information here will serve as a practical guide to clinicians who are interested in learning how to tailor DBT therapy for each client. A case formulation that is based on accurate and precise assessments serves to facilitate therapist empathy and compassion, description of problems, identification and targeting of relevant difficulties, and the selection of suitable interventions. It is important to recognize, however, that a case formulation is a dynamic entity constantly undergoing revisions based on new information. Invariably, there will be gaps in the analysis, and it is important to revise a case formulation and the associated treatment plan as needed, especially if a client is failing to make progress or is deteriorating. To date, no research has examined the impact of case formulation on the efficacy of DBT, and such studies are needed. In addition, future research is needed to investigate approaches to teaching case formulation skills, and on how to generalize these skills across diverse clients.
Acknowledgements Some details of the case description (age, clinical symptoms) were changed so as to protect client privacy.
References Davidson, K. (2006). Cognitive formulation in personality disorder. In Case formulation in cognitive behaviour therapy: The treatment of challenging and complex cases (pp. 216–237). Goldfried, M. R., & Davison, G. C. (1994). Clinical behaviour therapy - expanded edition. New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Hart, S., Sturmey, P., Logan, C., & McMurran, M. (2011). Forensic case formulation. International Journal of Forensic Mental Health, 10(2), 118–126. Koerner, K. (2012). Doing dialectical behavior therapy: A practical guide. New York: Guilford Press.
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Koerner, K., & Linehan, M. M. (1997). Case formulation in dialectical behavior therapy for borderline personality disorder. In T. D. Eells (Ed.), Handbook of psychotherapy case formulation (pp. 340–367). New York: Guilford Press. Linehan, M. (1993a). Cognitive-behavioral treatment of borderline personality disorder. New York, NY: Guilford Press. Linehan, M. M. (1993b). Skills training manual for treating borderline personality disorder. New York, NY: Guilford Press. Linehan, M. M. (1997). Validation and psychotherapy. In A. C. Bohart, & L. S. Greenberg (Eds.), Empathy reconsidered: New directions in psychotherapy (pp. 353–392). Logan, C., Nathan, R., & Brown, A. (2011). Formulation in clinical risk assessment and management. In Self-harm and violence: Towards best practice in managing risk in mental health services (pp. 187–204). McMain, S., Korman, L. M., & Dimeff, L. (2001). Dialectical behavior therapy and the treatment of emotion dysregulation. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 57(2), 183–196. Swales, M., & Heard, H. (2017). Dialectical behaviour therapy: Distinctive features (2nd ed.). Oxford: Routledge. Swenson, C. R. (2016). DBT® principles in action: Acceptance, change, and dialectics. New York, NY: Guilford Press.
C H A P T E R
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Transference-Focused Psychotherapy: Structural Diagnosis as the Basis for Case Formulation Kenneth N. Levy1,2, Yogev Kivity1, Frank E. Yeomans2 1Pennsylvania
State University, University Park, PA, United States; 2Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY, United States
Case formulation in transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP) is based on the severity of the patient’s personality pathology, also referred to as Personality Organization, which is mainly determined by the patient’s capacity for reality testing, predominant defence mechanisms, and consolidation of identity. In TFP, the patient’s level of personality organization or structure is evaluated at the beginning of treatment using the structural interview, which is a clinical psychiatric/psychological interview developed and articulated by Otto Kernberg (1984). That evaluation then serves as the basis for case formulation and treatment planning. The structural interview, and TFP more broadly, are theoretically rooted in the psychodynamic object relations theory (Kernberg, 1984).
REVIEW OF OBJECT RELATIONS THEORY IN RELATION TO AN UNDERSTANDING OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS IN TERMS OF PSYCHOLOGICAL STRUCTURE Central to our thinking about personality is how to understand identity and, in the case of severe personality disorder, identity diffusion. This latter term refers to an identity that is fragmented, without a clear and Case Formulation for Personality Disorders https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-813521-1.00002-3
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coherent sense of self. To better understand this fragmentation, we refer to the concept of the object relations dyad in the development of psychological structure. A dyad consists of a very specific and narrow mental image, or representation, of the self in relation to a corresponding very specific image, or representation, of another (the object of the self’s emotion) linked by an intense affect. The object relations dyad thus brings together affects with cognitive representations. These cognitive/affective dyads are first internalized in the mind in the course of a person’s early development but are also subject to continued modification throughout life. They become the building blocks of psychological structure, understood as the matrix through which the individual perceives self and the world. In the course of early development, the newborn experiences both moments of total satisfaction when the caretaker responds perfectly to its needs and also moments of fear, abandonment, and suffering when the caretaker is not available or, even worse, is neglectful or abusive. In this early phase of development, before object constancy is achieved, the self and the world are perceived through equally extreme and unrealistic lenses of all-good or all-bad. Libidinal (loving and affectionate) and aggressive (hateful and destructive) affects become organized around these extreme representations of self and others. This split state is sometimes referred to as the ‘paranoid-schizoid’ organization: schizoid because it is split and paranoid because the part of the mind characterized by aggressive affects is not experienced as part of the self but is projected and experienced as coming from others. Individuals whose subjective experience is mainly organized in this way tend to experience anxiety in relations to others since closeness is associated with danger and the risk of abandonment or attack. In most individuals, identity diffusion is an early stage of psychological development that resolves as they develop more complex and realistic images of self and others. However, identity diffusion persists in those with a borderline level of psychological organization and, in fact, defines that condition. In the state of identity diffusion, the dyads imbued with very specific affects (love, trust, hate, fear) are not brought together in a more coherent representation of a whole and complex self-characterized by nuanced emotions in relation to a complex sense of others. Instead of this, there is no ambivalence – one either totally loves or hates, one is totally fearful or trusting. In terms of subjective experience, identity diffusion is characterized by rapid changes in the sense of self in relation to other that correspond to the activation of a specific dyad by a ‘trigger event’. For example, a patient in a therapy session might abruptly shift from experiencing the therapist as a concerned caregiver to experiencing him as uncaring and hateful if the therapist glances at the clock. While a person with an integrated sense of self and others might think ‘my therapist can be concerned about me and also need to know when to end the session’, a person with identity diffusion might think ‘If my therapist doesn’t care for me totally and without
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limits, he hates me and wants to get rid of me’. A core feature of identity diffusion is the ongoing segregation of the cognitive and affective mental elements into a segment of purely positive affect and the opposing segment of exclusively negative affect. This split psychological structure is considered the basis of primitive defence mechanisms such as splitting itself, idealization/devaluation, and projective identification. In successful psychological development, life experience and learning lead individuals to move beyond the split paranoid-schizoid position and to achieve a mature psychological organization in which, for example, they can continue to love someone even when frustrated by that person rather than believe that frustration equals total rejection and abandonment. It is important to appreciate the impact of the level of psychological organization on: (1) the perception of oneself, (2) the perception of others, (3) the experience of affects/emotions, and (4) the expression of affects/ emotions. A split internal world corresponds to extreme emotional states while an integrated self facilitates balance and modulation of emotions. Emotional complexity does not exist in the split internal world of identity diffusion; what the person experiences in the immediate moment determines their experience of all of reality at that moment, without taking into account what they may have experienced at other times. This has an impact on reality testing. Without experiencing a total break from reality testing, the extreme and simplistic internal representations that are projected onto everyday experiences can distort perception according to the exaggerated images of the internal world. The combination of these distortions and the projection of aggressive affects hinders an individual’s capacity to adapt to the complexity of the world.
THE STRUCTURAL INTERVIEW AS A CLINICAL INSTRUMENT Structural interviewing consists of a mental status examination that has been adapted for assessing personality disorders. Kernberg called the interview ‘structural’ because it tries to evaluate the basic structures of the mind. It is not structured in terms of a decision tree for interview like the SCID or the ADIS or even the IPDE. The structures that it tries to evaluate are, first, the presence or level of identity diffusion (sense of self, coherence and commitment to goals, representation of others); Second, the degree of reality testing (differentiation of self vs. non-self, distinguishing internal vs. external, and social tact and empathy for social criteria of reality), and third, in that context, also, a secondary element, the diagnosis of the dominant defensive operations that characterize the individual (splitting, projective identification vs. repression). The defensive operations in what we call neurotic personality organization (milder cases), usually
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don’t show up in the interview, while defensive operations in severe personality disorder usually show up and reinforce diagnosis (particularly what we call primitive or immature defences, in contrast to neurotic or mature defences). Mature defences as articulated by Kernberg (1984), Vaillant (1994), and A. Freud (1965) include repression, intellectualization, isolation, rationalization, displacement, projection. Immature defences include splitting, primitive idealization, projective identification, omnipotent control, and denial. In the structural interview the therapist is assessing these areas in order to make a decision about the patient’s level of personality organization. This task is of utmost importance because it will dictate how therapists proceed with treatment. However, it is important to note that case conceptualization in TFP, while occurring mostly during the structural interview, is almost always a dynamic process that continues and develops throughout treatment, as the therapist’s understanding of the patient and their difficulties is modified based on information obtained in the process of therapy and becomes increasingly nuanced and accurate. During the structural interview, the therapist observes and obtains information through three channels: (1) the patient’s verbal communication; (2) the patient’s nonverbal communication (e.g., behaviour, affect); and (3) the therapist’s countertransference. Diagnoses and case formulation from the structural interview are based on an integration of clinical symptoms (both reported and observed), the assessment of intrapsychic structures (inferred from the patient’s narrative and experienced through countertransference), and quality of the therapeutic relationship (observed and experienced through countertransference). During the structural interview, therapists should get the following information: mental status, a complete symptom picture, the patients current functioning, and the patient’s sense of self and others, and, toward the end of the interview, their response to trial interpretations. In addition, the therapist provides the patient with feedback regarding their initial formulations and uses this feedback to assess the patients’ willingness to engage in treatment. Figure 2.1 illustrates how the therapist moves through the structural interview. As the therapist carries out the structural interview, he is constantly aware of the attitude of both the clinician and the patient. The therapist’s attitude should be one of concern but without siding with either side of the patient’s conflicts. Kernberg referred to this attitude as technical neutrality. In referring to the attitude as technical neutrality he was trying to differentiate it from the more traditional psychoanalytic concept of neutrality. By technical neutrality, we do not mean taking a bland, cool, and aloof attitude but rather a nonjudgmental stance that allows for all aspects of the patient’s experience to be considered. It is also important to note the patient’s attitude. Are they concerned? Are they cavalier?
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It is very important for rapport building that the therapist convey their understanding of the patient’s difficulties. This can be done without overt support, reassurance, or validation. Instead, a genuinely concerned attitude, an attentive stance, and staying close to the patient’s phenomenological experience all convey understanding, especially when embedded in warmth. It is important to remember two things about validation: (1) It can be invalidating; and (2) it can support distortions. For instance, reassuring the patient that you are confident in their ability to do something or that you value them can be experienced as invalidating of their concerns even if the reassurance is authentic to the therapist. It is also important to remember that a good interpretation can have a holding quality and be experienced as both very accepting and validating of the patient. For example, when working with a patient that expresses doubts about his ability to complete college despite being very intelligent, instead of providing direct reassurance, the therapist could say: ‘Despite being very smart and creative, it is difficult for you to imagine that you could achieve the goals you are aspiring toward. I, like others in your life, could tell you that I think you could complete college, but I imagine that at some level you might still doubt that it is possible’. Rather than overt reassurance this kind of comment captures the complexity of the patient’s experience. Also, maintaining technical neutrality can be very validating and filled with empathic regard. Nonjudgmental, noncritical stance provides patients with sense of safety that allows exploration of previously avoided memories, thoughts, and feelings. In TFP, empathy is defined as being able to connect with the entirety of the patient’s internal experience – even parts that they are not aware of (Yeomans, Clarkin, & Kernberg, 2015). By the end of the structural interview, the therapist should be able to provide the patient with their initial diagnostic impressions or understanding and be ready to move onto getting more history and to the contractsetting phase. The contract-setting phase sets the frame for the treatment. It makes explicit conditions for treatment and what the role and responsibilities are for both the patient and the therapist. During the course of the interview, the therapist should also assess attitude, attention, orientation, consciousness, comprehension, judgement, memory, and intelligence. The therapist begins the interview by providing some context: what they know about the patient, the purpose of the meeting, and what they are interested in finding out. We usually begin with the following four questions, which both facilitates the collection of important information as well as mental status:
1. 2. 3. 4.
I would like to know what brings you here? What is your understanding of the nature of your difficulties? What do you expect from treatment? Where are you now?
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Often, after their initial answer, a patient will ask whether they answered all the questions and may state something like ‘I don’t know if that answers all of your questions’. This is a good opportunity to assess mental status. The therapist can say: ‘Do you think you answered all the questions?’; ‘What do think?’; ‘What is your sense?’ The therapist can follow by respectfully asking, ‘Did you understand what I was asking?’ The four questions begin concretely and become more abstract. The first one is very concrete: What brought you here? The patient may answer concretely and say ‘my mother brought me’ or ‘I came by bus’. What’s the nature of your difficulties? That’s somewhat more abstract. What do you expect from treatment? That’s quite abstract. Where are you now? That’s totally unstructured. These questions at the same time have a progressive degree of unstructured nature to test the reality testing. The patient’s answers to these questions provide some cursory evidence for their level of personality organization because, for example, schizophrenic patients usually cannot answer these questions. In addition, although formally assessed only later in the interview, with these first four questions, the therapist immediately tests the patient’s sensorium: capacity for attention, degree of consciousness, intelligence and capacity to realistically provide appropriate answers.
1. T he therapist challenges the patient’s memory – whether they can remember those four questions. 2. The therapist tests intelligence – whether the patient can provide intelligent answers to the questions or not. 3. The therapist also observes the patient’s behaviour with them. 4. The therapist observes the patient’s affect. 5. The therapist observes the patient’s thoughts, both regarding content and process.
Next, the therapist asks symptoms and very completely so, and whenever there is a symptom that needs a differential diagnosis, they go into it. It is our experience that therapists often do not pay sufficient attention to descriptive symptoms. Research suggests that there are a number of important comorbidities to assess for and differential diagnoses to make with regard to BPD. These include: psychotic disorders, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, stress related disorders, attentional disorders, substance use disorders and eating disorders, and other personality disorders. A full discussion of the shared characteristics and the differential diagnosis of these disorders is beyond the scope of this chapter (see Kernberg & Yeomans, 2013). The next step is to assess the patient’s present life. The therapist can say to the patient, ‘I’d like to know about your present life, so to get to know you as you are, as a person. Can you tell me about your work, your studies, your family, your parents, your girlfriend or boyfriend, your children,
The Structural Interview as a Clinical Instrument
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what do you do in your free time?’ The goal is to get a complete picture of the patient’s present life circumstances. This allows the therapist to assess problems in the areas of: love and sex, in work and profession, in social life, in recreation, in creativity, in functioning. Once information about the patient’s current life has been obtained, the therapist asks about and assesses identity. There are two questions for assessing identity. First, the therapist selects one or two of individuals that the patient mentioned as important in their life and asks them to describe that person (s) to them, so that the therapist gets a live picture of them: ‘What makes this person unique? What makes them different from everybody else?’ With normal identity it is possible for a person to provide a live description and a sense of the person. It’s not something easy to do, but it evokes a thought process by which the therapist can see how a person reconstructs what’s essential. In contrast to a thoughtless, some kind of standard, canned, or stereotyped answer (e.g., ‘Oh, that’s a lovely person, great, very sensitive, lovely, beautiful person’.). The therapist obtained others’ descriptions until they have a clear sense, and then asks the patient: ‘Now that you’ve described somebody else to me, could you describe yourself? What makes you different from everybody else? What makes you a unique person?’ Of course, by that point the therapist already has an impression of the person and can already contrast that description with what they are observing, but also can evaluate to what extent there is a capacity for an assessment in depth. The therapist assesses the capacity for an integrated view of significant others and of self, in which contradictions may exist, but are described in an integrated, satisfactory way. Identify diffusion is an important indicator of a severe personality disorder and strongly suggest further exploration of personality disorder features. The next step is assessment of reality testing and is carried out only with patients who, during the interview, give the therapist a sense of something strange. The therapist focuses on those inappropriate aspects in the patient’s affect, thought, or behaviour. The therapist describes these aspects to the patient and then asks: ‘I noticed X – affect, thought, or behaviour – that seems strange to me. Can you see that?’ If the patient provides a conceivable explanation, reality testing is maintained. If that question disorganizes the patient, it indicates impairments in reality testing, which likely suggest a psychotic disorder rather than a personality disorder. If strong evidence exists for impaired reality testing early in the interview (e.g., patient falls asleep while at the same time talking with the therapist; or patient is unable to remember the therapist’s questions), the therapist can skip the previous parts and move immediately to evaluate the sensorium. If there are alterations of thought, affect, or behaviour, the therapist evaluated psychotic symptoms (hallucinations or delusions), that have to be distinguished from obsessive ideas, overvalued ideas, illusions, pseudohallucinations, hallucinosis, hypnogogic experiences, and
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faked hallucinations. If the therapist is unsure of the information obtained and how best to evaluate it, they can return again through the cycle in Fig. 2.1. If the patient seems confused and disoriented (i.e., an alteration of the sensorium), they may have acute organic mental illness that requires immediate psychiatric attention. If the sensorium is intact, the therapist moves to assessing alright memory, by ordinary memory tests, and intelligence. The similarities subtest of the WAIS is a very nice and easy way to get a gross assessment and compare it with the patient’s educational background. After that, the therapist obtains a thorough history from the patient. For example, ‘What I would like to do now (or in our next meeting) is to get a very complete history about your parents, what they were like, your childhood, the major influences on you, your sexual history, your school and work history, your prior therapy (or therapies), and so forth. This will give me a context to understand what we talked about today and what we continue to discuss in therapy’. After obtaining the history the therapist acknowledges that they have completed the task and asks the patient if there was anything that should have been asked that was not or if there is anything else that they feel the therapist should know in order to be helpful to them.
FIGURE 2.1 Cycling Through The Structural Interview
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The therapist can conclude the interview when he/she feels he has adequate information to support to have a clear diagnostic impression and sufficient information to set the treatment frame with the patient. The patient’s description of self and others, along with continuity or discontinuity/contradictions in his discourse and narrative, have provided the therapist with information about his level of identity diffusion versus integration. The patient’s understanding of his condition and problems add to what has been learned about his level of defensive operations from the presence or absence of split views of self and others: a tendency to externalize responsibility for problems within seeing any contribution on his part supports the presence of projection as a primitive defence. The therapist’s sense of the patient’s capacity to have a nuanced and rich experience of others versus a superficial one is an indication of the degree to which the patient is unknowingly trapped in his own internal world of object representations in contrast to being engaged in deep and genuine relations with others. The structural interview will also have provided information about the consistency/inconsistency/lack of the patient’s internal value system and about the level of aggressive affects and if they are egosyntonic or egodystonic. Finally, any questions about reality testing will have determined if the patient may be subject to distortions based on the power of simplistic internal representations or if the patient may be frankly psychotic. If the structural interview has provided evidence of identity diffusion, primitive defence mechanisms, and shaky but intact reality testing, the therapist will consider the patient to have a psychological structure organized at the borderline level (BPO). The next question is whether the patient is situated at the higher or lower level of BPO; this is determined mostly with regard to whether aggressive drives and affects are stronger than affiliative ones and whether the patient has some degree of meaningful involvement with others and with life activities. This distinction is important to guide the therapist is establishing an adequate treatment contract and frame. The next question is if the patient’s identity diffusion is manifest as such, as in prototypic BPD, or whether it is masked by the pathological grandiose structure (PGS) that distinguishes patients with narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) from other personality disorders in the BPO range. The PGS is a brittle and fundamentally hollow self structure present in the mind of those with NPD that appropriates all that is good to the self and projects all that is negative onto others. This can be seen in self-descriptions that are relatively intact and differentiated compared to those with BPD but also characterized by pathological grandiosity. The description of others, in contrast to the description of self in those with narcissistic personality is characterized by a poverty of detail and richness. The presence of this structure requires certain modifications of the
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techniques of TFP (see Diamond et al., submitted; Diamond, Yeomans, & Levy, 2011; Levy, 2012). Finally, the therapist decides if the patient falls within a more specific PD category (BPD proper, paranoid PD, schizoid PD, avoidant PD, etc.). The latter distinction has less bearing on the next step treatment (the discussion of diagnosis and of the treatment contract and frame) than the triage into the higher versus lower level of BPO and presence/absence of the PGS that subtends NPD. Fundamental to the discussion of the diagnostic impression is the explanation to the patient that his symptomatic picture, which, of course, must be addressed, is best understood and ultimately best treated by considered a fundamental underlying difficulty in the sense of self.
DISCUSSION OF THE DIAGNOSTIC IMPRESSION/ FORMULATION WITH THE PATIENT The structural interview is not only important in establishing a diagnosis and case formulation with personality-disordered patients but it is useful in gathering information that can be shared with the patient when providing feedback and in developing collaborate goals for the psychotherapy. Often therapists are reluctant to provide diagnostic feedback/case formulation to the patient because of concerns such as upsetting or stigmatizing the patient. Some therapists view the diagnosis of a personality disorder as pejorative, stigmatizing, or are afraid of the patient’s reaction. However, providing diagnostic feedback is important because patients have a right to know how the therapist conceptualizes their difficulties and importantly, one cannot begin the treatment in earnest if there is no explicit agreement about what the problems are that the patient is in treatment for (e.g., it makes no sense to propose a psychological treatment to a patient who insists his problems are exclusively biological). Additionally, the frame, its rationale, and the treatment approach and techniques are related to the diagnosis/case formulation. Patients often conceptualize their difficulties as depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, PTSD, ADHD, substance abuse, or as the victim of other people’s impositions and malevolence. Thus it is important to collect the necessary information to assess and make the differential diagnoses that will be helpful for the patient in understanding how the therapist understands their difficulties. A poorly conducted structural interview, will likely result in difficulty convincingly providing feedback to the patient. Having the information acquired in the structural interview allows the therapist to present feedback that can resonate with the patient’s experience without unnecessarily stigmatizing or upsetting them. In doing so, the therapist should stay phenomenologically close to the patient’s conscious experience and take their time
DISCUSSION OF THE DIAGNOSTIC IMPRESSION/FORMULATION
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in bringing disparate information into the patients awareness. Providing feedback obviously has to be done sensitively and rather than leaving the patient feeling labelled it should leave them feeling understood and hopeful. In sharing this information with the patient, they should feel understood and helped rather than stigmatized and judged. However, despite the best efforts, because the patient is identity diffused, they may have very disparate and unintegrated experiences of the feedback. On the one hand, they may feel the therapist is taking their concerns seriously, being thoughtful in their deliberations and phrasing, and on the other hand feel attacked and judged, not necessarily because of anything the therapist has said but because of their own judgements or experiences of others judgements. Also, this ambivalence can lead the patient to feel hopeful about the treatment with the therapist during the session, but afterwards, contradictory feelings may fester. It is important for the therapist to be vigilant for any ambivalence and gently address it. Following the diagnostic feedback, the therapist sets the frame for treatment. When working with personality-disordered patients it is important to have a clear discussion of the treatment frame or what is called the treatment contract in a TFP model (Yeomans, Selzer, & Clarkin, 1992). As described earlier, the contract-setting phase has multiple purposes. First, it educates the patient to psychotherapy. This is important for not only the therapy naïve patients but also therapy experienced ones because even those patients who have been in multiple treatments may have only minimal understanding of this particular type of therapy, in part because they may have been in therapies that utilized very different stances (e.g., supportive treatment, medication management, or CBT) or because all too frequently therapists are not explicit with patients about the structure and rationale for a treatment. A second goal of the contract-setting phase is to establish a clear treatment frame that allows the patient and therapist to address and reflect on the material that arises in treatment, including feelings both in and out of session. The treatment contract creates a safe environment for patients that allow their dynamics to unfold with the therapist. By providing structure and clear expectations, it also provides a safe environment for the therapist to work within. Having an explicit agreement of the tasks and responsibilities of each party also provides an avenue for discussing and understanding deviations from the frame or contract. As Diamond et al. (2013) outline more fully, the contract-setting phase is more difficult with narcissistic patients because the expectations and responsibilities confront and limit the patient’s grandiosity and omnipotent control and often results in their perceiving the therapist as controlling and imposing. The frame or contract is often initially rejected or tested in ways that may threaten the treatment. It is important when setting the treatment frame with personality disorder patients that the therapist utilize patients’ past
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treatment experiences and relationship patterns to predict the kind of difficulties they might experience in the treatment. It is also important for the therapist to examine a patient’s responses to the treatment frame to ensure that he or she is not simply acquiescing to the goals proposed by the therapist but is making a true commitment. The frame is established before beginning the therapy per se through negotiation of the treatment contract. The process is a collaborative one in which the therapist presents the rationale for elements of the therapy and the patient discusses any concerns that they may have. The therapist’s stance is collaborative not imposing, to avoid acquiescence of the patient. The therapist observes and monitors how the patient is responding and verbally checks-in with them about how they are feeling. The therapist combines flexibility and openness to discussion with adherence to essential aspects of the treatment. In addition to defining the responsibilities of patient and therapist, the structure provided by the contract protects the therapist’s ability to think clearly and reflect, provides a safe place for the patient’s dynamics to unfold, and sets the stage for exploring and interpreting the meaning of deviations from the contract. When there are deviations from the frame, referring back to the contract supports the patient’s capacity to step outside of the moment and to view their behaviour from alternate perspectives. An implicit message in the establishment of the contract is that all feelings can be experienced and reflected on, in contrast to the patient’s felt need to manage threatening aspects of affective experience through acting out and projection. This verbal agreement is often referred to as the treatment contract; it establishes the conditions or frame of the therapy in a way that emphasizes the experience of emotions within the therapy and curbs the expression of emotions in the form of acting out (cutting, taking overdoses, substance abuse, unsafe sex, etc.)
USING THE DIAGNOSTIC IMPRESSION/CASE FORMULATION TO CHOOSE A THERAPY Ultimately the diagnostic data from the structural interview is used to choose and guide therapy. In the broadest sense, knowing if the patient is organized at the neurotic, borderline, or psychotic level allows the therapist to make a choice about treatment intervention. Neurotically organized individuals can utilize a range of therapies across cognitive-behavioural and psychodynamic treatments. The particular therapy is a function of the patient’s difficulties and the patient’s interests. Some patients are interested in working on specific concerns or symptoms whereas others on broader issues such as capacity for intimacy and self-actualization. For those with focal interests and/or needs, short-term treatments are appropriate, such as cognitive-behavioural therapy, interpersonal therapy, and
Case Example
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short-term psychodynamic therapy, especially for those with depression. For patients with panic disorder, in addition, to a number of CBT based treatments, panic-focused psychodynamic psychotherapy can be used. When the patient is interested, psychoanalysis can be appropriate.
CASE EXAMPLE The case below is adapted from Levy (2012).
Presenting Problem and Client Description Anne was referred by a friend of hers in the field to a colleague who referred her to the therapist for treatment. Her chief complaints were feelings of chronic depression and diffuse anxiety. The colleague who referred her had also indicated that she was prone to angry outbursts, which a number of times resulted in having the police being called. These outbursts occurred in places of business, when travelling, with friends, family, lovers, and with neighbours. Anne was a tall, attractive, married woman in her mid-thirties with three children, who looked slightly younger than her chronological age. She was the older of two children. Growing up, her father was an extremely successful businessman who had left her with a substantial inheritance. He was a self-made man who was ‘all business’, hostile and very derogating of her, and generally too busy for his children. After her father’s death, her mother remarried. Her mother was both physically absent and emotionally distant while Anne was growing up; although she provided for basic and nonemotional needs, Anne’s mother tended to use this support to coerce her children to do as she desired. This pattern of behaviour continued into her children’s adulthood. Anne’s mother often provided the patient with loans and helped her with her finances as much of her inheritance was unavailable (e.g., in the form of stocks). Because of the unavailability of these funds, Anne had difficulty managing her money and often relied on her mother to organize her finances. In return, her mother often put pressure on Anne about where to live, where the children should go to school, and other major decisions in her life. Despite her overt perception that she had superior intelligence and abilities, Anne reported constant difficulties doing well in school and in sticking with any one of her multiple hobbies (e.g., horseback riding, acting, and singing). She generally blamed her parents for not encouraging her or helping her develop her talents. She perceived herself as having difficulty concentrating or at least following through on tasks. She felt easily bored or frustrated with whatever she was doing. Despite her difficulties with money, she tended to hire assistants to carry out the more mundane
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aspects of her work and hobbies (e.g., she hired someone to take her horseback riding for exercise because she found having to do so boring and an imposition). Her difficulties sticking with hobbies were sometimes made worse due to angry outbursts she would have with friends, colleagues, or others involved in these activities. She would frequently change her mind with regard to which hobbies were most important to and where she wanted to invest her time and efforts. She once sold a horse she owned because she had not ridden it in years, and then a few days later bought another after she saw a new horse she admired. The result of these patterns was that as she entered her 30s she had not yet developed expertise in any one area nor did she have a stable sense of what she wanted to do with her life. To gain the approval of her parents, she married a man who, while supportive of her and tolerant of her rages, was unable to provide sufficiently for the family, in part because he was disproportionally responsible for the children, and in part because he was probably identity diffused himself. Her inheritance and support from her mother provided for the family and allowed both her and her husband to live comfortably but without steady career investments. She felt terribly put out by having children, found them to be quite a burden, yet needed them as an excuse for not having invested in a career path nor achieved tangible successes. In addition to depressed mood and diffuse anxiety, the patient reported angry outbursts, significant alcohol and marijuana use, fleeting concerns about rapidly shifting interests, and unhappiness with the lack of success in her life. Upon detailed questioning the therapist determined that she was heavily involved with drinking and marijuana use. She felt considerably activated by routine situations and demands and saw the alcohol and drug use as ways of dampening her internal experience. She shared that her husband was concerned that she was too disconnected from the children and overly frustrated with them – frequently losing her temper with them over rather developmentally normal stresses. By all appearances, she was quite brittle and needed much support. In addition, to her mother’s financial and logistical support, she had a housekeeper, gardener, au pair, and a number of babysitters to help her maintain the household and take care of the children. Additionally, her husband did not work regularly and was the primary caregiver who not only took care of the children’s emotional needs but also brought them to all their lessons. At times Anne believed that her children and ‘unsupportive’ husband were responsible for her ‘not making it’ or becoming famous and she had frequent fantasies of leaving her family and ‘making it big’. She attended acting workshops and sang in a series of local bands, occasionally developing crushes on fellow actors or band members, particularly younger men. Sometimes these crushes resulted in affairs, sometimes in unrequited love relationships. She often fantasized about leaving her family and touring
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Europe with a younger man who would produce her music and help her achieve fame and fortune.
Case Formulation The case formulation for this patient was derived over a number of sessions using Kernberg’s structural interview. From the data that emerged, it became clear that despite her complaints Anne did not meet criteria for any axis I disorder. Although there were some somatic symptoms, she did not have any of the neurovegetative symptoms of depression, nor did she report feelings of worthlessness or excessive or inappropriate guilt or recurrent thoughts about death. She did report depressed mood and occasional loss of interest in activities, but these states were variable, fleeting, and typically in response to a perceived interpersonal slight or some other failure. In fact, rather than being anhedonic, she was particularly self-indulgent and pleasure seeking. Likewise, she did not meet criteria for dysthymia or depressive personality disorder, bipolar disorder, or an anxiety disorder. Although at times she displayed elevated, expansive, and irritable moods, they never lasted at least a week (or even four days for a hypomanic mood); instead, these symptoms tended to be quite labile, reactive to environmental triggers, quickly vacillating with depressed mood states or irritability as is more characteristic of personality disorders (Henry et al., 2001; Koenigsberg et al., 2002). This pattern was chronic as opposed to being present in discrete episodes as is the case with bipolar disorders. With regard to Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD), her anxiety was diffuse, free-floating, and variable. Her anxiety was also imbued with irritability and impulsivity and the GAD diagnosis was contradicted by a variable presence of anxiety and long periods of lack of any anxiety, even in the face of anxiety-provoking situations. Although she had described an occasional panic attack, she did not meet criteria for the disorder. Her reality testing and sensorium were mostly intact, but as she discussed her functioning, she described situation after situation in which she flew into rages and made outrageous verbal attacks on those she was close to as well as strangers she encountered. She would fly into rages against her parents, her husband, her children, the au pair, her auto mechanic, her singing and acting coaches, lovers, and countless others. No one was safe from her wrath. On the section in which patients are asked to describe themselves and others, consistent with Kernberg’s theory, Anne was able to provide a relatively intact and coherent, albeit grandiose, description of herself, whereas her descriptions of others were quite impoverished and in terms of need gratification and frustration. In terms of NPD, she clearly displayed a pervasive pattern of grandiosity in her fantasy and behaviour, a need for admiration, and described instances of clear lack of empathy
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for others. With regard to specific criteria, she (1) displayed a sense of selfimportance that was exaggerated in terms of her achievements and talents and she certainly expected to be recognized as superior without commensurate achievements; (2) described being preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, beauty, and ideal love; (3) indicated that she considered herself to be special and should associate with other special or high-status people; (4) described a clear need for excessive admiration; (5) displayed a sense of entitlement; (6) periodically was interpersonally exploitive; (7) had difficulty recognizing feelings and needs of others; (8) was often envious of others and believed that others were envious of her; and (9) at times behaved or displayed an arrogant, haughty attitude. Based on her symptom picture, her functioning in work and love, and inferred psychological organization based on the quality of the narrative descriptions of self and others as well as the quality of her relatedness to others, it was determined that the panoply of symptoms she presented with could best be understood as occurring in the context of an NPD diagnosis, with a borderline personality organization. This is a woman who aggressively defended against feeling small and inconsequential to her parents – one of whom was hostile and derogating and the other who was cold and disengaged. Understandably, she deeply wanted to be with her parents, to be valued by them, and to be nurtured by them. She was angry with them and others, sensitive to any indication that she was being devalued, and prone to distort benign situations so as to feel belittled. In these situations, she quickly responded with extreme rage that often resulted in her being removed from a situation and/or the dissolution of previously established relationships. The therapist could tell from the onset that he was about to begin a challenging treatment. Anne’s opening volley to the therapist showed both her aggression and her neediness. The very first thing she said to the therapist, referring to his office, was ‘Gee, this is the nicest broom closet I have ever seen’, which was quickly followed by reprimands for a series of perceived failures on his part: The therapist had no water cooler in his faculty office, his office was too far from where she had to park, the weather did not suit her. Each of these comments was embedded in an angry ‘put-out’ affect and resulted in the therapist feeling both criticized and sympathetic toward her. She was hostile but the therapist hypothesized that part of her wanted him to care for her. She wanted him to provide nourishment, intimacy, and atmospheric comfort. And even before the therapist said anything more than ‘come in’, she was angry at him for her own desires of wanting these things from him. Her comments invited interpretations but to do so would have been too early, too exposing, and too penetrating. Consistent with the therapist’s countertransference, she would feel attacked without any good options. Immediately, the therapist had a sense of the link between her neediness and her feelings of abandonment with
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her aggressiveness and superiority. The therapist felt she wanted these things from him and she was sad that he could not provide them, but she was also angry at him that he had not provided them and that the therapist evoked such desire in her. The therapist also sensed that she took great pleasure in knowing that he was incapable of making a water cooler appear or move the parking garage. And, even if he could get her some water and find her a closer parking spot, he could not change the weather. Thus, it was the therapist who was incapable not her. This dynamic continued, for as the therapist explained his practice to her, she dismissed everything he said as if he was telling her things she already knew (despite the fact that this was her first therapy). When the therapist told her his fee, she told him that he ‘would never get rich charging so little’. She followed this comment with stories of all the people who wanted a piece of her financially as if she was made of money and others were corrupt users who wanted nothing more than to have what was rightfully hers. Infused in these comments were the therapists presumed greed (i.e., that he was using her for his financial gain) but also its opposite: that he was not charging as much as he could and therefore, maybe he was not a greedy money-hungry user. Additionally, she was scoffing at his fee as if it was inconsequential to someone with her money maintaining her superiority to him but at the same time expressing her concern that the therapist didn’t really care about her besides the money. Early on, it was clear that her communications were complicated and represented a condensation of overt and covert narcissistic concerns. Despite the therapist’s experience of the patient as critical of him, she also spoke very glowingly about him and it became apparent that her experience of him was very different than the way she spoke to him. Anne described multiple situations in which she was hostile, disparaging, and rude toward others and the therapist experienced her as that way toward him too, despite the intermittent idealizations. However, she saw herself as someone others attacked, derogated, coerced, imposed upon, and controlled. She could not acknowledge it but it seemed to him from her affect and the content of what she was saying that she found him and his questions a terrible imposition. Someone was being imposed upon and controlled and someone was imposing and controlling, but it was unclear to her who had what roles. She and the therapist in the consultation room and others outside it vacillated back and forth in her scenarios. As the therapist continued the structural interview and he gathered information about her relationships and experience of others, she frequently talked about people in her life that she thought were narcissists or had a personality disorder. She often spoke to the therapist as if the two of them were colleagues discussing her family members who were patients two colleagues might consult one another about. The therapist began to experience dread about sharing his diagnostic impressions
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with her. He fretted how she was going to take it and imagined that she might lash out at him and end the treatment (part fear, part wish upon reflection). This was an unusual feeling for the therapist. Although it can be difficult to share a personality disorder diagnosis with patients, it is important that therapists convey diagnostic impressions to collaboratively set the treatment frame. The therapist not only advocates the sharing of diagnoses with patients but usually feels quite at ease and skilled when doing so. Despite the therapist’s apprehension, he knew what he needed to do and dutifully did so. The therapist did his best to be tactful and precise in his language and to utilize the material she shared in ways that he thought would resonate with her. To his surprise she initially took the news very well. His descriptions of her experience and the psychological rationales he described resonated with her but, most importantly, despite her disparagement of those she perceived as narcissistic in her circle of family and friends, she disclosed that she had long suspected that she herself could be diagnosed with NPD (in fact, she reported that she wondered about this for almost 10 years!). This was an important moment of both reflection and connection between them. They had a shared experience that the therapist could now refer back to as needed. It was not just the therapist who thought she was narcissistic; she too believed this. The discussion of the treatment frame was easier now that both were on the same page about the problems and they discussed each of their roles and responsibilities in the treatment as well as the rationale behind them. She was less defensive but the therapist realized that this state was most likely only temporary. With Anne, the therapist stated that although she felt what they were suggesting was reasonable right now, we might predict that at some later time she might feel differently and that it would be important to discuss those feelings as they arise. It is not uncommon for NPD patients to begin therapy with either a haughty devaluing attitude toward the therapist or conversely with an idealization of the therapist as one who can magically provide solutions to all problems. Both these stances result from the need to sustain the grandiose sense of self and from the envy the patient experiences in relation to others. In both cases the patient envies the therapist’s functioning and psychological health. This conflict often leads the patient to devalue the therapist or aspects of the therapy and to either subtly or explicitly reject the therapist’s interventions. In Anne’s case, she prefaced every acceptance of what the therapist offered by stating ‘Of course’. At other times, she made small tweaks to the therapist wording. At still other times, she would reject what the therapist said, only to come in the next week or sometime later and share with him her newfound understanding that was exactly what the therapist had offered earlier but which she had rejected.
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REVIEW OF RESEARCH Empirical support for the reliability, validity, and clinical utility of the structural interview comes from two main lines of research: studies on the traditional structural interview, and studies on the Structured Interview of Personality Organization (STIPO), a semistructured interview derived from the structural interview.
RESEARCH ON THE STRUCTURAL INTERVIEW Reliability of the Structural Interview Several studies have now established the interrater reliability of structural diagnosis based on the structural interview (e.g., Armelius, Sundbom, Fransson, & Kullgren, 1990; Bauer, Hunt, Gould, & Goldstein, 1980; Carr, Goldstein, Hunt, & Kernberg, 1979; Derksen, Hummelen, & Bouwens, 1994; Ingenhoven et al., 2009; Kullgren, 1987; Lewis & Harder, 1991). These studies show that, regardless of whether clinicians provide global impression or dimensional ratings, high rates of agreements are achieved on structural diagnosis using the structural interview.
Validity and Clinical Utility of the Structural Interview The convergent validity of the structural diagnosis has been supported in studies that show that measures of the structural diagnosis from the structural interview are positively correlated with related constructs such as DSM personality disorders diagnoses, personality pathology, and use of primitive defence mechanisms, as assessed by a variety of methods, such as structured interviews, batteries of psychological testing and selfreport questionnaires (Armelius et al., 1990; Bauer et al., 1980; Carr et al., 1979; Kernberg et al., 1981; Kullgren, 1987; Lewis & Harder, 1991; Reich & Frances, 1984).
Research on the Structured Interview of Personality Organization (STIPO) The STIPO (Clarkin, Caligor, Stern, & Kernberg, 2004), and its revised version the STIPO-R (Clarkin, Caligor, Stern, & Kernberg, 2015) is a semistructured interview based on the structural interview that was developed for use in clinical and research settings. The 55-item STIPO-R consists of standard questions along with additional clarification probes. Ratings are then used to compute five subscales: identity; object relations; defences; aggression; and moral values. In addition, a narcissism dimension can be
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scored from items that are included in the other subscales. It is possible to also classify patients into categories of neurotic, high borderline and low borderline personality organization (Hörz et al., 2009).
Reliability of the Structured Interview of Personality Organization (STIPO) The interrater reliability of the STIPO is well-established, with estimates of excellent intraclass correlations (ICCs) as well as good-to-excellent internal consistency coefficients, except for the reality testing subscale for which internal consistency is just short of satisfactory (0.69), possibly due to small number of items (Doering et al., 2013; Preti, Prunas, Sarno, & De Panfilis, 2012; Stern et al., 2010).
Validity and Clinical Utility of the Structured Interview of Personality Organization (STIPO) The STIPO has been shown to differentiate between various DSM disorders in theoretically meaningful ways and to correlate with self-report measures of personality organization, as well as other theoretically relevant constructs such as attachment style, coping, anger, dissociation, and temperament (Doering et al., 2013; Stern et al., 2010). Studies have also shown that the STIPO is sensitive to improvements in personality organization during successful treatments of borderline personality disorder, including TFP (Doering et al., 2010). In addition, higher STIPO scores also predicted greater likelihood of dropout among dual-diagnosis patients in a residential treatment for substance abuse (Preti et al., 2015). In sum, research on the traditional and semistructured versions of the structural interview shows that trained clinicians can achieve adequate agreement on the structural diagnosis based on either a global clinical judgement or dimensional ratings. In addition, the structural interview is successful in capturing the construct of structural diagnosis, and, more broadly, various dimensions of personality pathology, in theoretically and clinically meaningful ways.
CONCLUDING REMARKS The structural interview is a clinical psychiatric/psychological interview developed by Otto Kernberg (1984) that is central to the case formulation in TFP. Through structural interviewing the therapist is able to assess the severity of the patient’s personality pathology conceptualized both in terms of personality organization and the specific PD diagnosis.
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Assessment of personality organization provides an understanding of the patient’s capacity for reality testing, predominant defence mechanisms employed, and the patients level of identity consolidation. Based on the structural interview, the therapist derives a complete picture of the patients presenting symptoms, pathological personality traits, identity, and mental status needed to make the differential between levels of personality organization and various diagnoses such as major depression, bipolar disorder, panic disorder and borderline and narcissistic personality disorders. The information gathered during the structural interview allows the therapist to confidently provide feedback to the patient that resonates with both parties and thus contributes to the collaborative development of a treatment frame and plan. Additionally, the information obtained allows the therapist to discuss threats to the treatment (e.g., coming late, missing sessions, etc) and how those threats can be protected against in advance and addressed if they arise.
Acknowledgements Select details of the case description were changed so as to protect client privacy.
References Armelius, B. Å., Sundbom, E., Fransson, P., & Kullgren, G. (1990). Personality organization defined by DMT and the structural interview. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 31(2), 81–88. Bauer, S. F., Hunt, H. F., Gould, M., & Goldstein, E. G. (1980). Borderline personality organization, structural diagnosis and the structural interview: A pilot study of interview analysis. Psychiatry, 43(3), 224–233. Carr, A. C., Goldstein, E. G., Hunt, H. F., & Kernberg, O. F. (1979). Psychological tests and borderline patients. Journal of Personality Assessment, 43(6), 582–590. Clarkin, J. F., Caligor, E., Stern, B. L., & Kernberg, O. F. (2004). Structured Interview of Personality Organization (STIPO). New York: Personality Disorders Institute, Weill Medical College of Cornell University. Clarkin, J. F., Caligor, E., Stern, B. L., & Kernberg, O. F. (2015). Structured Interview for Personality Organization – Revised (STIPO-R). New York: Personality Disorders Institute, Weill Medical College of Cornell University. Derksen, J. J., Hummelen, J. W., & Bouwens, P. J. (1994). Interrater reliability of the structural interview. Journal of Personality Disorders, 8(2), 131–139. Diamond, D., Yeomans, F. E., & Levy, K. (2011). Psychodynamic Psychotherapy for Narcissistic Personality Disorder. In K. Campbell, & J. Miller (Eds.), The Handbook of Narcissism and Narcissistic Personality Disorder: Theoretical Approaches, Empirical Findings, and Treatment (pp. 423–433). New York: Wiley. Diamond, D., Yeomans, F., Stern, B. & Kernberg, O. A Clinical Guide for Treating Narcissistic Disorder: A Transference Focused Psychotherapy. (Guilford Press, Submitted). Diamond, D., Yeomans, F. E., Stern, B., Levy, K. N., Hörz, S., Doering, S., et al. (2013). Transference focused psychotherapy for patients with comorbid narcissistic and borderline personality disorder. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 33(6), 527–551. Doering, S., Burgmer, M., Heuft, G., Menke, D., Bäumer, B., Lübking, M., et al. (2013). Reliability and validity of the German version of the Structured Interview of Personality Organization (STIPO). BMC Psychiatry, 13(1), 210.
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Doering, S., Hörz, S., Rentrop, M., Fischer-Kern, M., Schuster, P., Benecke, C., et al. (2010). Transference-focused psychotherapy v. treatment by community psychotherapists for borderline personality disorder: Randomised controlled trial. The British Journal of Psychiatry, 196(5), 389–395. Freud, A. (1965). Normality and pathology in childhood: Assessments of development. Harmondsworth: Penguin. Henry, C., Mitropoulou, V., New, A. S., Koenigsberg, H. W., Silverman, J., & Siever, L. J. (2001). Affective instability and impulsivity in borderline personality and bipolar II disorders: Similarities and differences. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 35(6), 307–312. Hörz, S., Stern, B., Caligor, E., Critchfield, K., Kernberg, O. F., Mertens, W., et al. (2009). A prototypical profile of borderline personality organization using the Structured Interview of Personality Organization (STIPO). Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 57(6), 1464–1468. Ingenhoven, T. J., Duivenvoorden, H. J., Brogtrop, J., Lindenborn, A., van den Brink, W., & Passchier, J. (2009). Brief communications: Interrater reliability for Kernberg’s structural interview for assessing personality organization. Journal of Personality Disorders, 23(5), 528–534. Kernberg, O. (1984). Severe personality disorders: Psychotherapeutic strategies. New Haven: Yale University Press. Kernberg, O. F., Goldstein, E. G., Carr, A. C., Hunt, H. F., Bauer, S. F., & Blumenthal, R. (1981). Diagnosing borderline personality. A pilot study using multiple diagnostic methods. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 169(4), 225–231. Kernberg, O. F., & Yeomans, F. E. (2013). Borderline personality disorder, bipolar disorder, depression, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and narcissistic personality disorder: Practical differential diagnosis. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 77(1), 1–22. Koenigsberg, H. W., Harvey, P. D., Mitropoulou, V., Schmeidler, J., New, A. S., Goodman, M., et al. (2002). Characterizing affective instability in borderline personality disorder. American Journal of Psychiatry, 159(5), 784–788. Kullgren, G. (1987). An empirical comparison of three different borderline concepts. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 76(3), 246–255. Levy, K. N. (2012). Subtypes, dimensions, levels, and mental states in narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 68(8), 886–897. Lewis, S. J., & Harder, D. W. (1991). A comparison of four measures to diagnose DSM-III-R borderline personality disorder in outpatients. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 179(6), 320–337. Preti, E., Prunas, A., Sarno, I., & De Panfilis, C. (2012). Proprietà psicometriche della STIPO [Psychometric properties of the STIPO]. In F. Madeddu, & E. Preti (Eds.), La diagnosi strutturale di personalità secondo il modello di O.F. Kernberg. La versione italiana della Structured Interview of Personality Organization (pp. 59–84). Milano: Raffaello Cortina. Preti, E., Rottoli, C., Dainese, S., Di Pierro, R., Rancati, F., & Madeddu, F. (2015). Personality structure features associated with early dropout in patients with substance-related disorders and comorbid personality disorders. International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 13(4), 536–547. Reich, J., & Frances, A. (1984). The structural interview method for diagnosing borderline disorders: A critique. Psychiatric Quarterly, 56(3), 229–235. Stern, B. L., Caligor, E., Clarkin, J. F., Critchfield, K. L., Horz, S., MacCornack, V., et al. (2010). Structured Interview of Personality Organization (STIPO): Preliminary psychometrics in a clinical sample. Journal of Personality Assessment, 92(1), 35–44. Vaillant, G. E. (1994). Ego mechanisms of defense and personality psychopathology. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 103(1), 44–50. Yeomans, F. E., Clarkin, J. F., & Kernberg, O. F. (2015). Transference-focused psychotherapy for borderline personality disorder: A clinical guide. American Psychiatric Publishing, Washington D.C. Yeomans, F. E., Selzer, M. A., & Clarkin, J. F. (1992). Treating the borderline patient: A contractbased approach. New York: Basic Books.
C H A P T E R
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Case Formulations in Mentalization-Based Treatment (MBT) for Patients With Borderline Personality Disorder Sigmund Karterud1, Mickey T. Kongerslev2,3,4,5 1Norwegian
Institute for Mentalizing, Oslo, Norway; 2Centre of Excellence on Personality Disorder, Region Zealand Psychiatry, Slagelse, Denmark; 3Psychiatric Research Unit, Region Zealand Psychiatry, Slagelse, Denmark; 4Psychiatric Clinic Roskilde, Region Zealand Psychiatry, Roskilde, Denmark; 5Department of Psychology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark
THE HETEROGENEITY OF BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER A mentalization-based case formulation is an integral part of mentalization-based treatment (MBT) (Bateman & Fonagy, 2016, p. 157–161), primarily targeted at borderline personality disorder (BPD). As a diagnostic category, BPD is very heterogeneous. Based upon the DSM-IV/ DSM-5, there are 256 different possible combinations to meet criteria for BPD (Johansen, Karterud, Pedersen, Gude, & Falkum, 2004). In addition, most patients diagnosed with BPD have a range of other pathological personality traits. BPD comes in different combinations, e.g., with additional avoidant, narcissistic, histrionic, antisocial and/or paranoid traits. Then there are the concurrent symptom disorders, like anxiety, mood, eating and substance abuse disorders. Add to that the different levels of functioning (e.g., according to the global assessment of functioning scale (GAF), or the levels of personality functioning scale (LPFS) in the alternative DSM-5 model). BPD patients might also be at the brink of psychosis and in need
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of hospital treatment, or they may be reasonably well adjusted but characterized by stormy relationships. This palpable heterogeneity clearly indicates that treatment should be tailored to the individual patient. However, as we will discuss in the next section, the underlying pathological mechanisms in BPD are quite similar, or more correctly, they are variations of a limited set of dysfunctions which justifies some schemes in the construction of case formulations for these patients. In recent years, MBT has also been applied to the treatment of other personality and symptom disorders, e.g., antisocial PD (Bateman, O’Connell, Lorenzini, Gardner, & Fonagy, 2016), and eating and substance abuse disorders (Morken, Binder, Arefjord, & Karterud, 2017; Robinson et al., 2016). Case formulations in these conditions will naturally reflect these disorders’ special personality traits and symptoms. However, they will also build upon the principles which have been developed for the more prototypical BPD patient that is candidate for the kind of intensive and concurrent outpatient treatment which constitutes a modern MBT treatment programme: i.e., a poorly functioning BPD patient who is unable to work or study properly, is isolated and alone or in stormy relationships, who is more or less chronic suicidal and often self-mutilating, is confused with respect to own identity, emotionally unstable and often resorts to drug or alcohol abuse. This is the typical patient we focus on in this chapter.
THE THEORETICAL GRID FOR CASE FORMULATIONS FOR BORDERLINE PATIENTS The core constituent components of human personality are (1) temperament, (2) attachment pattern, and (3) capability for self-reflection (explicit mentalizing) (Karterud, 2017; Karterud, Wilberg, & Urnes, 2017). What we denote as BPD is a particular combination of features belonging to these components. These features undermine the individual’s sense of self and self-stability and his/her capability of responsible social agency. In contrast to other theoretical formulations we do not regard BPD primarily as an emotion regulation disorder, but as a disorder of personality in the sense that all of the three major components are affected: temperament, attachment and mentalizing capability. The temperament, or primary emotional system liability of BPD concerns impulsivity as well as low threshold, high intensity and regulation problems, particularly of the primary emotions of RAGE and SEPARATION DISTRESS (written in bold in accordance with the style of J. Panksepp) (Karterud et al., 2016; Panksepp & Biven, 2012). The separation distress accounts for the profound dysphoria of being left alone and the desperate attempts at avoiding abandonment. The tragedy for BPD patients is that their proclivity for rage reactions enhances the risk of being left alone.
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However, an intense temperament is not enough for a borderline condition. There also needs to be an insecure attachment in addition, and prototypically of an overinvolved or disorganized type (Karterud et al., 2017). However, all sorts of insecure attachment may be encountered in BPD patients, e.g., a dismissive pattern when there also are concurrent narcissistic and/or antisocial traits, an unresolved pattern with respect to trauma and loss, and not the least a disorganized pattern. It is particularly important to become aware of a disorganized pattern, since especially these patients will have great problems with the group part of MBT (Morken, Karterud, & Arefjord, 2014). They have no effective strategy for dealing with interpersonal closeness. Realizing that a disorganized attachment pattern is operative, makes it easier to understand the patient’s reluctance to group involvement and their need for time and patience to approach fellow patients. The mentalizing problems of BPD patients account for their poor sense of self. The problems are twofold. First, there is the general lowered capability of mentalizing which makes the person liable to misunderstanding of others and oneself and thereby exploitable and exploiting. In addition, there comes the liability for gross breakdowns of mentalizing abilities and the risk for (self-) destructive acting out. Both deficits affect the capability for self-understanding and experience of identity, coherence and agency. The deficits can be traced back to failures in the formative parentchild interaction, whereby the child’s subjective experiences are victims of faulty mirroring and distorting intersubjective transaction (Fonagy, Gergely, Jurist, & Target, 2002). One aspect of the triadic constellation described above is epistemic mistrust – one of the new theoretical developments within MBT (Bo, Sharp, Fonagy, & Kongerslev, 2017; Fonagy & Allison, 2014). Epistemic trust is defined as a person’s trust in the authenticity and personal relevance of interpersonally transmitted knowledge (Bateman, Campbell, Luyten, & Fonagy, 2017). As such, epistemic trust is a prerequisite for being open to and learning from an ever-changing social environment. Put briefly, this theoretical reasoning, furthermore, argues that one of the most devastating developmental consequences of impoverished, insecure or traumatic parenting, is that it leaves the child in a state of epistemic mistrust. Attachment trauma (including incongruent and unmarked mirroring) undermines the child capacity for trust in others, and hence the individual’s ability to learn from others, to learn in interpersonal contexts. This is a core feature of BPD, a widespread inability to learn from others, presumably based on a lack of epistemic trust. To address epistemic mistrust, therapists must use so-called ostensive cues, which are signals that communicate to the person, that the information presented are for you. In terms of babies and their psychosocial development, good-enough parenting is rich on ostensive cues in terms of eye-contact, motherese and so forth, though some
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recent studies calls the relative necessity or importance of ostensive cues into question (see, e.g., Szufnarowska, Rohlfing, Fawcett, & Gredebäck, 2014). Regarding psychotherapy, ostensive cues concern the ‘marking’ of personally relevant information to the patient. In this respect, the case formulation becomes highly important, inasmuch as it attempts to address how the general MBT model of BPD and psychotherapy is meaningful and makes sense, signalling to the patient that the model and therapy in question are of relevance not only to patients with BPD in general, but for him/her specifically. If a case formulation achieves this end, makes the patient feel understood and that the therapy makes sense to him/her, then it will help the patient to also become more motivated and less distrustful, enhancing the chance of successful outcome through making him/her more open to new interpersonal learning. A case formulation for BPD patients should contain references to the individual’s peculiar constellation of the earlier-mentioned personality constituents.
THE MENTALIZATION-BASED APPROACH TO CASE FORMULATIONS Until the millennium shift, treatment of BPD was considered very difficult to perform and even more difficult to do research upon. High dropout-rates was a major obstacle (Hummelen, Wilberg, & Karterud, 2007). It is highly problematic to do intention-to-treat analysis when 40%–60% of the patients drop out of treatment and do not respond to calls for followup investigations. Consequently, modern approaches to the treatment of BPD considers treatment retention and working alliance (as conceptualized by Bordin, 1979) as crucial factors for therapeutic success (Bateman & Fonagy, 2016; Weinberg et al., 2011). Therapists should invest continuous efforts in the establishment and maintenance of an alliance. In MBT, the case formulation is regarded as a major tool in this respect. This pragmatic aspect of case formulations for BPD patients overrule all other considerations, e.g., extensiveness, completeness, complexity, etc. This means that the case formulation should be highly individually tailored, and always aim, above all, to maximize the therapeutic alliance, treatment adherence and motivation. Some authors have called for studies of reliability and validity for case formulations (Eells, 2009). However, traditional reliability and validity studies do not make sense with respect to case formulations in MBT. Rather, the overriding aims are: (1) Does the patient feel understood? (2) Does the case formulation help the patient to make sense of his/her problems and understand more of the forthcoming therapeutic project, including the tasks and goals of therapy? (3) Does the formulation help
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counteract dropout risk? Because BPD patients are so diverse and often in very unstable states of mind at the beginning of treatment, and may display periods of very low reflective functioning (RF; Fonagy, Target, Steele, & Steele, 1998), case formulations for some patients may be very brief, while others are more extensive and comprehensive. The mentalizing level of the patient is decisive in this respect. There is thus no objective position from which to judge if the case formulation is valid or reliable. The ultimate judge is the patient him/herself. That might be a topic for research, i.e., not validity in a traditional sense, but validity as experienced as meaningful and helpful from the perspective of the patient. These considerations are of course controversial. For example, Gunderson (2011) has commented upon an MBT case formulation on a difficult patient and writes ‘it should not be prepared with concern for whether the patient shares or agrees with that understanding’ (p. 91). There is a disagreement here, and the clinician has to choose his/her own priorities. Another principle that derives from the same overall alliance view, is that a MBT case formulation should not be formulated from the position of the therapist being an expert on the patient’s mind couched in a professional jargon which might please a supervisor or other colleagues, but a document written in plain common-sense language, preferably using the patient’s own terms, aimed at this particular patient, and no one else. A MBT case formulation is a text directed towards a specific person. Indeed, too much professional jargon and references to general/abstract principles and concepts, could be considered iatrogenic in the sense that they might alienate the patient from the treatment project and/or stimulate pseudomentalizing rather than mentalizing proper (Bateman & Fonagy, 2004, p. 169–172). The treatment context will also influence the content of the case formulation. Intensive outpatient MBT is the most common treatment format. That is a concurrent group-individual kind of psychotherapy and in this instance the case formulation should address challenges in both components, and ideally attempt to weave the different components together. However, treatment may also take place in a hospital setting where the case formulation is part of the milieu therapy (Skårderud & Sommerfeldt, 2015). Age will also influence the formulation, e.g., when applied to adolescents. And finally, there is the time aspect. Usually the case formulation is worked out and presented during the initial phase of treatment. However, it can and should be reformulated over the whole course of treatment, in light of new knowledge, changing aims, or lack of progress. Overall, the aims of an MBT case formulation are to mutually organize the thinking for therapist and patient, model a mentalizing approach in a formal/explicit way and model humility about the nature of understanding minds (Bateman & Fonagy, 2004, 2016).
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NEEDED INFORMATION Patients diagnosed with BPD who are admitted to an MBT programme are usually assessed with a broad battery of tests. A personality profile according to SCID-5-PD (formerly SCID-II) is crucial. It displays the extensiveness of personality pathology (e.g., the total number of DSM-5 PD criteria fulfilled) and the particular combination of specific criteria. Is it mainly a combination of borderline and avoidant features (more common in women) or a combination of borderline and antisocial features (more common in men)? The GAF should also be rated. There is a huge difference between a BPD patient functioning at GAF = 40 compared to a patient at GAF = 65. Patients should be interviewed with respect to their awareness and tolerance of primary emotions. The interviewer should be very alert to different manifestations of separation distress. It does not only concern fear about being left alone in a physical sense, but also experiences of not being seen, heard, respected, being an outsider, an alien in the world, etc. Ideally one should have performed an Adult Attachment Interview (AAI; Hesse, 1999), but that is primarily a research instrument. It is too time-consuming for clinical practice. Alternatively, one can give the Experiences in Close Relationship questionnaire (ECR; Fraley, Waller, & Brennan, 2000). It will indicate if there is an overinvolved versus a dismissive attachment pattern. The clinician should decide on the question of attachment insecurity from the life history as told by the patient and from information recorded in accompanying professional documents and from results on attachment measures. There is no quick and easy way to measure mentalizing ability. The clinician should explore interpersonal encounters and judge whether eventual mentalizing problems are typical for the patient’s overall relational style and cognition. This might be done by the Interview on Mentalizing Failures (Karterud et al., 2017). This is a semistructured interview where the interviewer first explains how mentalizing failures might be experienced and then asks the patient to describe an event (or more) during the last 1–2 weeks where this may have happened to him/her. Usually patients go straight on to tell about recent difficult interpersonal encounters where they were overwhelmed by emotions, ‘lost their mind’, became confused, could not think clearly, etc. The primary task of the interviewer is to explore (1) the event in detail, (2) the patient’s capacity for narrating the event and the intersubjective scenario therein, and (3) the patient’s capability of reflecting upon the event from the more secure distance of the present moment. Finally, the interviewer asks if this event is typical for a range of situations in the patient’s life. Most often it will be, and the interviewer might suggest that some of the details, which have been explored, could be pasted into the case formulation, as typical relational problems concerning emotions, attachment figures and mentalizing difficulties.
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WORKING IN CONCERT WITH THE PSYCHOEDUCATIONAL GROUP In contrast to many other variants of case formulations, the MBT case formulation has few references to theoretical explanatory principles of the psychopathology or the treatment rationale. This is the job of the psychoeducational group which is a component of the initial treatment package. This group is manualized (Karterud & Bateman, 2010) and consists of 12 1,5 hour sessions. Different techniques are utilized: Written handouts, small ‘lectures’, homework, roleplaying, vignette exercises, but above all the participants are encouraged to tell about their personal experiences with the themes covered in the sessions. The themes are: What is mentalizing? What is mentalizing failures? What are primary emotions? How do we regulate emotions? What is attachment? What is attachment conflict? What is the relation between primary emotions, anxiety and attachment? What is the relation between primary emotions, depression and attachment? What are personality disorders in general and BPD in particular? What is MBT? How does MBT work and what is my role in it? Patients are encouraged to discuss their personal experiences from this group with the individual therapist. The initial treatment package thus provides powerful means to ‘socialize’ with the treatment, i.e., to understand the therapist’s words and procedures as meaningful expressions of a certain theory of personality and its disorders and how one’s own particular problems fit into this scheme.
TECHNICAL DETAILS The MBT case formulation is a cooperative text, i.e., worked out in open cooperation with the patient. The therapist should inform the patients early on during the assessment phase that a case formulation is to be constructed and that the therapist will present a first draft. During assessment, the therapist may suggest some content to be included, e.g., as revealed by the Interview on Mentalizing Failures. Most often patients accept the formulations that are suggested by the therapist, or just have minor corrections on faulty facts (‘actually I lived in Oslo by that time and it was my sister who self-harmed, not my brother’). If therapist and patient disagree on content, one should explore the roots of the different viewpoints and find compromises if need be. For example, patient X had a paranoid personality disorder and felt easily slighted by other people. X considered the people whom he felt slighted by to be ‘difficult persons’. He wanted this written explicitly in his formulation. The therapists thought that X himself often was the most difficult person in encounters with others. The compromise was that ‘difficult’ was written in brackets, marking that it was a formulation that was quoted from X.
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There are somewhat divergent views if the case formulation should address the patient with the personal pronoun ‘you’ (Allen, Fonagy, & Bateman, 2008, p. 172–176; Bateman & Fonagy, 2016), or first name or surname, e.g., ‘Rita’ (Karterud et al., 2017). Should one start like ‘You grew up in a large family in Oslo that sadly broke down when …’ or ‘Rita grew up in a large family …’? ‘You’ is more direct and personal. However, we prefer first names for various reasons. Above all we want to stimulate the person to regard him/herself from the outside, from a third-person perspective. That is an overall aim with MBT. Looking at oneself from the outside means that one is able to take a more common-sense perspective at oneself, e.g., ‘look, this is how people in our culture usually regard such things’. When we label the person in the case formulation by first name, e.g., ‘Rita’, we present a narrative which is shared by the whole MBT team. We have constructed a fictive person, ‘Rita’, which hopefully may resemble the ‘Rita’ which is the narrative self-construct, but which is not identical with it. ‘Rita’ may be viewed in different ways. ‘Here is the way we conceive you. Does it make sense? Here are the elements in your life story that we, at this point in time, regard as most crucial’. We do not indicate that the ‘Rita’ which we have constructed is the ‘true Rita’. We indicate some perspectives that we regard as useful working hypotheses. We want to stimulate the person’s curiosity to learn more about that person we have sketched in the case formulation. Ideally, the text should not be identical to the person’s prior self-understanding. It should add something more, be slightly ahead of it. We want to get at a point where the person will say, ‘yes that is me, but I haven’t quite thought of it that way before’. For patients to reach such a realization, it is important that the text is formulated in a plain language. The text is directed to them, it is about them, from the MBT team. The text should not be too long. One should remember that the content is condensed and highly emotional and patients should not be overburdened. We usually recommend a length of approximately 1–1.5 pages, but again, this is a general recommendation and in the end, it always depends on the specific patient. Although MBT case formulations might differ considerably, the usual format will be paragraphs that cover the following themes:
1. Family background. Very often this has been seriously disturbed, e.g., with neglect, violence, sexual traumas, chaos, misuse, lies, manipulations, psychotic parents, substance abusing parents and the like. This should shortly be described. 2. Early symptoms and traits and consequences for school attendance and peer relationships. 3. The most difficult emotions. 4. Adult relational pattern.
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5. Self-destructive behaviour. 6. Consequences for education, work and intimate relations. 7. Typical mentalizing failures exemplified through interpersonal encounters – and sometimes also validating examples on situations where the patient manages well regarding mentalizing. 8. Previous treatment attempts. 9. What could possibly be difficult in MBT? a. In individual therapy? b. In group therapy? 10. Aims and means of the treatment. Concrete and specific short- and long-term treatment goals, as well as means to deliver them might also be briefly stated and thereby mutually agreed upon by both patient and therapist.
THE MENTAL ACTIVITY OF THE THERAPIST WHILE CONSTRUCTING A CASE FORMULATION The mental activity of the therapists may be condensed to the slogan ‘minding minds’. This fundamental capability is what distinguishes Homo sapiens from other animals. However, minding minds can be performed at different levels of sophistication. While constructing a case formulation, it should be at its peak, i.e., constructing an understanding of the other in terms of that individual’s unique developmental history within a certain culture at a certain historical epoch. It calls for therapist personal skills that involve a combination of empathy with a good mastery of the theory of mentalizing and its relevance for personality development. Neither aspect is sufficient alone. Empathy without theory favours the destiny of being lost in emotions. This trap is always present when working with patients with a personality disorder. Strong emotions will spill over to the therapist by contagion, arousal of primary emotions (Karterud et al., 2016) and projective identification, and his/her power of mentalizing will suffer. In particular might the activation of care and fear in the mind of the therapist pull the treatment in an overly supportive direction that undermines the more fundamental aim of developing the patient’s mentalizing ability. On the other hand, a merely theoretical understanding of the individual will miss the necessary ingredients that make the individual being felt understood. And furthermore, a different kind of theory will imply different conceptualizations and priorities which also might be useful in certain contexts, but it will not be MBT. That part should also be present in the therapist’s mind, how the theory-driven and contextualized understanding of the patients might colour the interpersonal scenarios that most likely will be staged in the peculiar kind of combined groupindividual treatment that characterizes MBT.
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CASE FORMULATIONS IN MENTALIZATION-BASED TREATMENT (MBT) TRAINING How to make an MBT case formulation is taught in the advanced course on MBT as practised in the Nordic countries. This course consists typically of 8 whole days distributed over 8–10 months. All participants are required to present video-recordings of an ongoing MBT. We start with the case formulations. The typical beginner’s mistake is that the formulation is too much formulated as a text aimed at colleagues and that references to the forthcoming treatment is missing. Training candidates usually reformulate their case formulations several times. The example below we will illustrate how the formulations are evaluated.
TWO DIFFERENT BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER (BPD) CASE FORMULATIONS In this section, we will present two different case formulations so that the reader can get an impression of what we are talking about. The contexts for these two patients are different. The first concerns a prototypical BPD patient in the initial phase of an intensive outpatient MBT programme (e.g., Kvarstein et al., 2015). The second example concerns an adolescent BPD patient who received a treatment programme consisting of mainly MBT group therapy and it reflects the growing recognition that BPD is indeed a highly prevalent and debilitating disorder amongst young people (Bo & Kongerslev, 2017; Kongerslev, Chanen, & Simonsen., 2015).
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) Case Formulation 1 Mary (30) was raised in a home where both mother and father drank excessively. She frequently experienced stormy parties and fierce quarrelling. The quarrels often turned quite dramatic and Mary harbours many painful memories from that time. As a child she was concerned to protect her younger brother from the turmoil at home. She describes her mother as being emotionally unstable and Mary was always alert to what kind of mood her mother was in and how she could adapt to that. She found it difficult to predict how mother would react: Would she be helpful and supportive or raging and scolding? Mary came to develop symptoms of anxiety and depression at an early age. Around 16 she received medication, such as tranquilizers, sleeping pills and antidepressants. In the years after she joined her mother at her parties and drank accordingly. Nevertheless, she managed to complete high school with good results and started working as a nurse assistant. She gave up the work when addiction came to rule most of her life. Over
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the next 8–10 years, she was out of work for long periods, floating around without any home and dependent on a mixture of alcohol and different drugs. She had different boyfriends and lovers and was often dependent on them for practical life purposes which made it difficult to stand up against abuse and violence. Mary was approached by outgoing team members from the local Youth and Young Adult Addiction Programme and reluctantly she engaged in (periods of) drug management treatments and rehabilitation. Over the last couple of years she has established a more enduring relationship and she now lives with her boyfriend and their two-year old daughter. Her motivation for change has increased, and she was referred to the local MBT programme. In the initial assessments, Mary tells that she is not keen on spending too much time in therapy on her childhood and adolescent experiences. She has the opinion that the ‘past is past’ and that one cannot do anything about it. She wants to focus on the present. She wants help with her everyday problems of coping with people. Strictly speaking, she would have preferred no contact with other people at all since it always leads to trouble. Her choice would have been living on a remote island, alone with her boyfriend. However, after becoming a mother she realizes that she should get along with people she encounters, for the sake of her daughter. She hates the idea that her own problems should become a burden for her daughter. Mary’s therapist believes that childhood and youth experiences influence Mary’s present days relational trouble, e.g., that an insecure upbringing has a significant share in her experiences of interpersonal insecurity as an adult. One example may be that she often relates to people in a suspicious way, that she is alert and sceptical as to their motives. She might easily judge people on beforehand and get a feeling of ‘something wrong’. This might upset her, and she easily gets annoyed or angry and can yell at people and say things to hurt them. However, inside she experiences strong feelings of fear and insecurity as well. She is afraid of being left alone, particularly by her boyfriend, and to be cheated by other people. When Mary gets this feeling that ‘something is wrong’, she most probably suffers what her therapist labels as ‘mentalizing failure’, i.e., that her emotions take over and blurs her ability to think clearly. However, Mary might look for ‘proof’to validate her impression that ‘something is wrong’, and the intensity of her thoughts might then escalate in concert with overwhelming and scaring feelings. In such situations, she might say and do things, which she regrets in the aftermath. This pattern is a heavy burden for Mary, and she worries if she is turning more and more like her mother and that it will be harmful for her daughter and boyfriend if she keeps on in this way.
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As for the current MBT, it is important that Mary reports on such events to the therapist so that they can explore them in detail. It is a challenge to find out if acts and utterances of other people concern other affairs than what Mary believes when she is in a suspicious mode. Since Mary often feels shameful after such incidences, and in the aftermath, tends to scold and blame herself fiercely, it is important to also explore what happens between her and other people, what we, in MBT treatment label interpersonal transactions, to avoid self-blaming – that ‘everything is Mary’s fault’. So far, in the individual part of the treatment programme, ‘Mary has done a good job. She has attended treatment sessions regularly, reported on significant events, explored these with the therapist and tried out new strategies in between sessions. Now, when it is time for her to attend the group part of the programme, it might be useful to focus her attention on situations where she becomes puzzled by thoughts and actions by other group members, trying to be more curious and open-minded and not judgemental on the reasons why other people think or do what they do. Such ‘exercises’ might be easier for her in the group than in the oftenheated encounters with her boyfriend. This is in accordance with her overall aim of the treatment: To come to trust other people in a better way’. When Mary received this case formulation, she was anxious about the content, but curious. After reading it, she was silent for a while before she spoke with a low voice: ‘Yes, this is me. But it’s tough to read. I feel pity for this person. How did you come to understand so much?’ This case formulation was presented by a participant at an MBT advanced training course. It was discussed by the training group of 12 candidates and their teacher. It was found quite good as it satisfied the criteria in the following way:
1. The length and narrative style seemed appropriate. The text contained two professional phrases, ‘mentalizing failures’ and ‘interpersonal transactions’, but they were explained and were believed to function appropriately as bridges to the psychoeducational part of the programme. 2. The family background was described in terms and references that makes it plausible that Mary developed an insecure attachment pattern of a mixed kind, alternating between overinvolvement (identification with mother, parentification, emotional overreaction) and distancing (longing for an isolated existence with an idealized object). 3. Early symptoms and traits and consequences for school attendance are described. Symptoms of anxiety and depression were recognized, but handled in a medicalized way, possibly reinforcing the family culture of coping with difficult feelings and emotions through chemicals.
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4. The most difficult emotions are described, e.g., rage, separation distress, fear, shame and guilt feelings. 5. Adult relational pattern is described as being exploitable, suspicious and emotional. 6. Self-destructive behaviour is described as part of previous addictive lifestyle. 7. Consequences for education, work and intimate relations are described as: Completing high school, but cannot cope with ordinary work demands due to addictive lifestyle and interpersonal sensitivity. Intimate relations are coined by being dependent and exploitable and utterly sensitive for critical remarks. 8. Typical mentalizing failures are described including suspiciousness, often distorted views of other’s intentions, being victim of unmentalized affects, loss of self-control and excessive self-blame. 9. Previous treatment attempts are mentioned shortly, being initiated by an outgoing team for youth addicts. After several attempts aiming at substance use reduction, she sobers up after childbirth and becomes motivated for doing something with her emotional, relational and mentalizing problems. 10. Treatment challenges are described, including that Mary should: (a) report on troublesome interpersonal events and (b) be aware of own reactions in the MBT group that resembles troublesome events in real life. 11. The major response from the patient was that she felt understood.
At MBT training courses, the case formulations are discussed and evaluated according to the criteria mentioned earlier in this section. Through these discussions, MBT training candidates usually learn the style and format quickly. Many candidates do considerable revisions of their initial drafts that often: (1) are too long, (2) have too many irrelevant details, (3) are written in a professional discourse style, more like a report to a colleague, (4) lacks some of the ingredients mentioned above, e.g., examples of emotional dysregulation or mentalizing failures and implications for current treatment. There is often a palpable curiosity when the candidate, after having discussed the case formulation, presents the first video-recording of a therapy session with the patient. Most often the candidates are nodding, indicating that what they see corresponds with what they had expected. However, not so seldom they react with surprise, when the patient seems to function on a higher or lower mentalizing level than what was expected from the case formulation. If this is the case, we go back to the case formulation to find out where the discrepancy resides. Usually this is a most enlightening exercise for the therapist.
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It is crucial for the learning process to discuss details of the therapist’s video-recordings. This should be done differently than the practice of MBT (video-based) supervision. During training, the therapy process details are discussed from a theoretical perspective. How do we understand the constant flow of patient’s speech acts and nonverbal communications as they unfold in the peculiar discourse conjointly developed by the therapy couple? How do we understand the therapist? And both of them, and their interaction, in terms of the theory of mentalizing and personality disorders? And most important, what we see, is that consonant with the case formulation? During this training group practice, therapists come to a more profound understanding of what mentalizing is all about. They become socialized to a certain way of understanding intersubjective transactions and, when internalized, it will affect the way they will construct their case formulations.
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) Case Formulation 2 Emily (17) is a young girl who lives with her mum and dad. Emily does not remember a lot about her early childhood, but she does remember that her mum and dad had many rows, and especially her dad’s outburst of anger could make her feel scared. Emily, however, also remembers how she always, even as a child, had very intense temper tantrums – for example when she hit a teacher in first grade, which also meant that she got referred to a school psychologist. When Emily entered her teens, she began to feel different and as an outsider in her school class. The other pupils bullied her, so Emily began to skip school and hang around with somewhat older boys and girls. She had plenty of one-night stands as well as brief but stormy relationships, including some abusive ones. At the age of 14 Emily also began to smoke grass and occasionally take coke. She also developed an eating disorder, because she felt fat though she was thin in terms of BMI, and she began to cut herself regularly. When the other pupils in her class began high school, Emily dropped out and just stayed at home, spending her time looking for dates and boys on dating sites. Emily was also frequently admitted to emergency departments because of her self-harming behaviour. Often this was the results of rows with her boyfriends, which led her to become self-harming or suicidal. Currently, Emily has a boyfriend who is six years older than her. Emily feels that he is good for her. But her boyfriend works, whilst Emily just stays at home. This creates troubles for Emily, because she panics when her boyfriend does not respond to her text messages or calls during the day. This makes Emily worry, thinking relentlessly and becoming angry, because she then feels she does not mean anything to him, that he really does not care about her. And then she feels sad and scared, and fears he will leave her, which often triggers feelings of emptiness or being unlovable, which in turn
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makes Emily cut herself or take an overdose of pills. This again, often results in Emily being admitted to emergency department and being hospitalized for a night or two. In the wake of her self-harm or suicide attempts, Emily experiences distressing feelings of shame and fear of her boyfriend leaving her, or her parents giving up on her, which becomes almost unbearable. In such a state Emily sometimes becomes self-harming again or aggressive when hospitalized, which often leads to her being restrained. Though Emily understands why staff at the hospital restrains her in such situations, she also feels ashamed and, in a way, abused. Emily is now about to begin group therapy to help her with her interpersonal problems, fears of being unlovable and rejected by her boyfriend, her low self-esteem and tendency for self-harm and suicide attempts. She has especially three concerns regarding embarking on group therapy. First, she worries about being able to attend regularly. To help Emily attend, she has agreed to that mum will take her to therapy for the first 3 months, and also that the group therapists (Tine and Eric) may call her and/or her parents in case she misses a session without contacting the clinic. Second, Emily worries if she will fit into the group, because she feels that no one else would be interested in her. This could also make it difficult for Emily to speak out in the group. To help Emily, she has agreed that the group therapists might address her gently in the group in case she remains silent, but also that the group therapists must respect if she does not feel for talking when addressed. Lastly, Emily fears her own temper, that due to her tendency to becoming easily annoyed and provoked, she might react angrily towards other members in the group. To help Emily with this issue, the group therapists have promised Emily that they will help her, by monitoring her arousal. But because Emily is good at hiding her feelings right up to the moment when she explodes, Emily also needs to help the therapists with the monitoring – e.g., through saying it to them once she notices any annoyance or in case she feels she cannot speak, than just leaving the group and taking a moment by herself. Then one of the group therapists will come to her and help her calm down if necessary. ‘Emily hopes that the treatment can help her get better control of herself and intense feelings of rage and being unlovable. To this end, Emily must bring episodes of self-harm and/or rows with her boyfriend to the group, so she can work on her problems in the group. Through this work Emily can get a better perspective on herself and her own reactions. Also, the group might stimulate some of the very feelings of anger or being different/unlovable/wrong as she struggles with in her private life. In that case it is important that Emily, once she feels safe in the group and with her therapists, is willing to explore this in the group’. The above illustrates the use of MBT case formulation with an adolescent diagnosed with BPD embarking on MBT group therapy. The case formulation was developed in cooperation between the patient and one
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of the group therapists, in the sense that she knew that the first three sessions (of which mother also attended two) with the group therapist would result in a written formulation, which in the fourth sessions was discussed with Emily. Emily was happy with the formulation and did not suggest any changes. Adopting the general scheme for MBT case formulations outlined in this chapter, the example illustrates these in the following way:
1. U nnecessary jargon was avoided. Though Emily (and her mother) received some psychoeducation during the second session with one of the group therapists regarding MBT treatment and its theoretical model for BPD. 2. Her developmental history was sketched, in a condensed form, and included to highlight her temperament characterized by highly intense feelings of anger together with her separation anxiety and developmental experiences of trauma, and of being different and wrong. 3. Her difficult emotions and self-states are named, in terms of e.g., anger, rage, being wrong and unlovable, coupled with feelings of shame. 4. Attachment difficulties are also highlighted and exemplified in terms of current relationships, in terms of her desperate need for a fast response and in case the boyfriend did not, how this would lead her into self-destructive behaviours. 5. Mentalizing difficulties in terms of hypermentalizing are described, often highly prototypical for adolescents with BPD. How she begins to worry when her boyfriends do not react and gets stuck in this worry until she mentally collapses and begins to cut herself or gets suicidal to rid herself of the intense negative feelings. 6. Her concerns regarding the group therapy was addressed together with her aims for the therapy.
Both Emily and her therapists found the formulation regarding her concerns about group therapy especially helpful because the group therapist then could go back and refer to this written text, whenever Emily, during therapy, notably, in the beginning, missed sessions and was reluctant to return to the group claiming that the other group members disliked her. Over the course of her therapy, Emily in fact became a very popular member of the group, though it was only at the end of her therapy that she herself became able to see this. Moreover, when she on five occasions left the group in anger, slamming the door, the therapists used the case formulation to help her understand that her reaction was actually understandable, and that even though she felt ashamed in the aftermath, her reactions had been anticipated and accepted, and in this light, was indeed ‘just’ something to be worked upon.
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MINDING THE DIFFICULT PATIENT Some patients are more complicated than others. They may have frequent transient psychotic experiences of borderline type or have a regular comorbid psychotic disorder, substance use disorder, eating disorder or Asperger traits, have a low IQ or a personality profile with prominent narcissistic, antisocial or paranoid features. In these conditions, we find either a general and very low mentalizing ability or ‘pockets’ of mental functioning with very low mentalizing, or misuse of mentalizing. Simonsen, Nørgaard, Larsen, and Bjørnholm (2011) have discussed such a difficult patient diagnosed with borderline and antisocial PDs as well as substance use disorder (cannabis and amphetamine), and this case has been commented on by Gunderson (2011), Bateman (2011) and Skårderud (2011). The patient had previously been convicted for selling drugs and involved in several acts of violence, but she was now enrolled in an MBT day hospital programme in Denmark. According to Simonsen et al. (2011), it was clear from the outset that Ms X was difficult to integrate in the treatment programme: ‘Irregularities and breach of rules persisted during the four and a half months she was treated at the Day Clinic including non-attendance, showing up late, walking out, verbal abuse, open cell phone and bringing her pets to the clinic’ (p.74). In the group, she was often silent and commented seldom on the stories told by the other patients. When she responded, it was often perceived as insensitive and provoked anger. Her own stories concerned conflicts with friends and family where her emotions seemed to be constricted to those of anger and need for revenge. Empathy, whether in the here and now, or displayed towards her friends and family, did not seem to belong to the repertoire of Ms X. Her rude relational style also showed up in the relation towards her individual therapist who had to endure a lot of derogatory remarks and sometimes even be called an idiot. When she was presented with her case formulation that amounted to two pages, she spontaneously responded ‘are you crazy?’ Both Skårderud (2011) and Bateman (2011) points to the priority of process over content in the construction of the case formulation and that this principle might be all the more important the more crippled the mentalizing ability is. In this case, Ms X did not seem to experience the case formulation as hers. Rather it seemed to be experienced as yet another document from more or less hostile authorities (e.g., ‘you have been so and so – habitually braking so and so rules’). Skårderud calls for more explicit cooperative strategies which might have promoted an experience of there being ‘two minds in the text’. Patients need to feel their subjectivity being mirrored sensitively and accurately: ‘Where am I in the text? I can hear the authorities, but where am I?’ A take-home message from this is that when the MBT therapist writes a case formulation he/she should be aware of how hypersensitive patients with severe BPD pathology is towards being mentalized/mirrored in ways that does not resonate exactly with their own
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current mentalizing of themselves. Hence, though we ideally want the MBT case formulation to not only mirror the patients current self-understanding but also further it through being slightly ahead of it, it should be noted that with the most severe BPD patients, it is often wiser to stick to empathic formulations, to which both patient and therapist can agree, to avoid dysregulating the patient unnecessarily.
IMPLICATIONS AND CONSEQUENCES FOR THERAPY How MBT case formulations might influence the therapeutic process, have been a theme for some recent studies (Folmo, Karterud, Kongerslev, Kvarstein, & Stänicke, 2018; Karterud, 2018; Morken et al., 2014). It is noteworthy that all of them focus on the transference (understood in a broad sense of the term), e.g., how to mentalize the patient’s style of relating as it unfolds in the here and now, in relation to the therapist and/or the group. That is equal to ‘mentalizing attachment relationships’ which is particularly difficult for borderline patients. Confronted with this task, patients tend to give up the project which is sketched in their case formulation and turn to all kind of defensive manoeuvres. A typical scenario is trying to control and idealize the individual therapist by leaving certain topics unexplored and flee from the (devaluated) group. Folmo et al. (2018) compared two high quality MBT sessions from different therapists with two low quality MBT sessions by different therapists. In the two low-quality MBT sessions, the therapists had resigned from the task of doing MBT in accordance with the manuals and case formulations, while in the high-quality sessions, the therapists worked hard on alliance issues to reach a kind of therapeutic discourse where the relationship to the devalued group component could be explored, with reference to the patients’ case formulations.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS MBT is an empirically supported treatment tailored to target the core pathology of BPD. In MBT, the case formulation functions to tailor the general MBT treatment principles and model of BPD towards each individual patient. This is done, through a description of how each patient represents a unique variation on a general theoretical model, including an intense temperament (primary emotions), an insecure attachment pattern and mentalizing dysfunctions. The MBT case formulation is a cooperative text, developed through a process of cooperation between the patient and the therapist, to help them organizing their thinking and arrive at a shared understanding. The overriding aim of the formulation is to maximize the therapeutic alliance, treatment adherence and motivation – through making
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the patient feel understood and being a person whose problems and suffering makes sense as well as anticipating potential problems the patient might have with attending and benefitting from therapy. In general, the style of writing should be empathic, avoid jargon, and use the patient’s own language and match the patient’s current level of mentalizing capacities.
Acknowledgements Some details of the case description, e.g., name, age, habilitation, identity markers, were changed so as to protect client privacy.
References Allen, J. G., Fonagy, P., & Bateman, A. (2008). Mentalizing in clinical practice. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing. Bateman, A. (2011). Commentary on “minding the difficult patient”: Mentalizing and the use of formulation in patients with borderline personality disorder comorbid with antisocial personality disorder. Personality and Mental Health, 5(1), 85–90. Bateman, A., Campbell, C., Luyten, P., & Fonagy, P. (2017). A mentalization-based approach to common factors in the treatment of borderline personality disorder. Current Opinion in Psychology, 21, 44–49. Bateman, A., & Fonagy, P. (2004). Psychotherapy for borderline personality disorder: Mentalizationbased treatment. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Bateman, A., & Fonagy, P. (2016). Mentalization-based treatment for personality disorders: A practical guide. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Bateman, A., O’Connell, J., Lorenzini, N., Gardner, T., & Fonagy, P. (2016). A randomised controlled trial of mentalization-based treatment versus structured clinical management for patients with comorbid borderline personality disorder and antisocial personality disorder. BMC Psychiatry, 16, 304. Bo, S., & Kongerslev, M. (2017). Self-reported patterns of impairments in mentalization, attachment, and psychopathology among clinically referred adolescents with and without borderline personality pathology. Borderline Personality Disorder and Emotion Dysregulation, 4(4). Bo, S., Sharp, C., Fonagy, P., & Kongerslev, M. (2017). Hypermentalizing, attachment, and epistemic trust in adolescent BPD: Clinical illustrations. Personality Disorders, 8(2), 172–182. Bordin, E. S. (1979). The generalizability of the psychoanalytic concept of the working alliance. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 16(3), 252–260. Eells, T. E. (2009). Contemporary themes in case formulations. In P. Sturmey (Ed.), Clinical case formulation: Varieties of approaches (pp. 293–316). Oxford: John Wiley & Sons. Folmo, E. J., Karterud, S. W., Kongerslev, M., Kvarstein, E. H., & Stänicke, E. (2018). Battles of the comfort zone: A model of therapeutic strategy, technique, alliance and epistemic trust Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, (In revision). Fonagy, P., & Allison, E. (2014). The role of mentalizing and epistemic trust in the therapeutic relationship. Psychotherapy, 51(3), 372–380. Fonagy, P., Gergely, G., Jurist, E. L., & Target, M. (2002). Affect regulation, mentalization, and the development of the self. New York: Other Press. Fonagy, P., Target, M., Steele, H., & Steele, M. (1998). Reflective-functioning manual for application to adult attachment interviews (version 5). London: University College London. Fraley, R. C., Waller, N. G., & Brennan, K. A. (2000). An item response theory analysis of selfreport measures of adult attachment. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 78(2), 350–365. Gunderson, J. (2011). Complex case: Mentalization-inspired case formulation: Minding the difficult patient. Personality and Mental Health, 51(1), 91–92.
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Hesse, E. (1999). The adult attachment interview: Historical and current perspectives. In J. Cassidy, & P. R. Shaver (Eds.), Handbook of attachment: Theory, research, and clinical applications (pp. 395–433). New York: Guilford Press. Hummelen, B., Wilberg, T., & Karterud, S. (2007). Interviews of female patients with borderline personality disorder who dropped out of group psychotherapy. International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, 57(1), 67–91. Johansen, M., Karterud, S., Pedersen, G., Gude, T., & Falkum, E. (2004). An investigation of the prototype validity of the borderline DSM-IV construct. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 109(4), 289–298. Karterud, S. (2017). Personlighet [Personality]. Oslo: Gyldendal akademisk. Karterud, S. (2018). A high quality mentalization-based group therapy session. Group Analysis, 51(1). Karterud, S., & Bateman, A. (2010). Manual for mentaliseringsbasert psykoedukativ gruppeterapi (MBT-I) [Manual for mentalization-based group psychoeducation]. Oslo: Gyldendal Akademisk. Karterud, S., Pedersen, G., Johansen, M., Wilberg, T., Davis, K., & Panksepp, J. (2016). Primary emotional traits in patients with personality disorders. Personality and Mental Health, 10(4), 261–273. Karterud, S., Wilberg, T., & Urnes, Ø. (2017). Personlighetspsykiatri [Personality psychiatry]. (2nd ed.). Oslo: Gyldendal Akademisk. Kongerslev, M. T., Chanen, A. M., & Simonsen, E. (2015). Personality disorder in childhood and adolescence comes of age: A review of the current evidence and prospects for future research. Scandinavian Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychology, 3(1), 31–48. Kvarstein, E. H., Pedersen, G., Urnes, O., Hummelen, B., Wilberg, T., & Karterud, S. (2015). Changing from a traditional psychodynamic treatment programme to mentalizationbased treatment for patients with borderline personality disorder - does it make a difference? Psychology and Psychotherapy, 88(1), 71–86. Morken, K., Karterud, S., & Arefjord, N. (2014). Transforming disorganized attachment through mentalization-based treatment. Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, 44(2), 117–126. Morken, K. T. E., Binder, P. E., Arefjord, N., & Karterud, S. (2017 May 17). Juggling thoughts and feelings: How do female patients with borderline symptomology and substance use disorder experience change in mentalization-based treatment? Psychotherapy Research, 1–16. https://doi.org/10.1080/10503307.2017.1325021. Advance online publication. Panksepp, J., & Biven, L. (2012). The archaeology of mind: Neuroevolutionary origins of human emotions. New York: W.W Norton. Robinson, P., Hellier, J., Barrett, B., Barzdaitiene, D., Bateman, A., Bogaardt, A., et al. (2016). The NOURISHED randomised controlled trial comparing mentalisation-based treatment for eating disorders (MBT-ED) with specialist supportive clinical management (SSCM-ED) for patients with eating disorders and symptoms of borderline personality disorder. Trials, 17(1), 549. Simonsen, S., Nørgaard, N. L., Larsen, K. A., & Bjørnholm, K. I. (2011). Mentalization-inspired case formulation: Minding the difficult patient. Personality and Mental Health, 5, 73–79. Skårderud, F. (2011). Two minds in the text: A commentary to sebastian simonsen, nana lund nørgaard, kirsten aaskov larsen and kraka ingeborg bjørnholm: Mentalization-inspired case formulation: Minding the difficult patient. Personality and Mental Health, 5(1), 80–84. Skårderud, F., & Sommerfeldt, B. (2015). Miljøterapiboka [Milieu therapy book]. Oslo: Gyldendal Akademisk. Szufnarowska, J., Rohlfing, K. J., Fawcett, C., & Gredebäck, G. (2014). Is ostension any more than attention? Scientific Reports, 4, 5304. Weinberg, I., Ronningstam, E., Goldblatt, M. J., Schechter, M., & Maltsberger, J. T. (2011). Common factors in empirically supported treatments of borderline personality disorder. Current Psychiatry Reports, 13(1), 60–68.
C H A P T E R
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The Corrective Experience of Getting a Life: Case Formulation Using General Psychiatric Management as a Framework to Facilitate Remission and Recovery Lois W. Choi-Kain, Ellen F. Finch McLean Hospital, Belmont, MA, United States
INTRODUCTION Case formulation is a fundamental common ingredient in evidencebased treatments (EBTs) for borderline personality disorder (BPD). This book uniquely illustrates the way that different treatments for BPD outline specific formulations of how the disorder develops, thereby illuminating pathways for intervention or change. For both the patient and clinician, case formulation anchors a collaborative understanding of problems, basis for setting goals, and plan for the management of symptoms. The case formulation can in this way stabilize care and predict threats to the therapeutic alliance. While psychodynamic formulations present a depth and refinement in conceptualization about how an individual’s unique personal history influences the development of their psychological conflicts and difficulties, modern psychiatric formulation emphasizes the interface between biology and social factors (i.e., biopsychosocial considerations), perhaps with less depth and specificity than psychodynamic formulation, focusing
Case Formulation for Personality Disorders https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-813521-1.00004-7
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© 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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instead on neurobiology and disease process (Summers, 2003). The major EBTs for BPD – both psychodynamic and behavioural – incorporate a way of understanding BPD in biopsychosocial terms, considering ‘nondynamic factors’ such as genetics, temperament, and neurobiology as well as social cognitive differences. Considering the stigmatization of BPD patients as being ‘treatment resistant’, the medicalization of the case formulation provides a kind of objectivity that decreases blame and judgement and invokes a standard of care. General Psychiatric Management (GPM; McMain et al., 2009; Gunderson & Links, 2014) entered the arena of evidence-based care when it proved to be similar to Dialectical Behavioural Therapy (DBT; Linehan, 1993; Linehan, Suarez, & Allmon, 1991) in effectiveness in all the major indicators of clinical improvement. A large one-year randomized control trial of BPD patients treated with either GPM (n = 90) or DBT (n = 90) found that both groups improved across outcomes, including frequency and severity of suicidal and nonsuicidal self-injury, health care utilization, and BPD symptoms (McMain et al., 2009). There were no significant differences between groups for any outcomes and improvements were sustained at a two-year follow up (McMain, Guimond, Streiner, Cardish, & Links, 2012). DBT is more intensive in its framework, with at least an additional 2–3 h of treatment time per week. It, like other EBTs for BPD, requires more extensive training for its practitioners. A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials of psychotherapies for BPD concluded that effectiveness of treatment were not related to intensity and duration (Cristea et al., 2017). However, on review of these data, it appears that treatments with a coherent and consistent formulation of BPD have larger effects than CBT for personality disorders (Davidson, 2007), which takes a more transdiagnostic approach. One interpretation of these results may be that a major source of efficacy in the EBTs for BPD is the way the treatment content, focus, and techniques revolve around a formulation of BPD as the central clinical problem. GPM distills experienced clinical wisdom about BPD in a straightforward, coherent framework for clinicians of any level of experience to implement. It may be that GPM boils down the essential ingredients of effective treatment for BPD in a more accessible, less complicated way than the more intensive evidence-based approaches available. Attending a one-day GPM workshop also improves clinicians’ attitudes about treating BPD. For example, clinicians report feeling more hopeful, competent, and open to treat BPD (Keuroghlian et al., 2016; Masland et al., 2018). Unique to GPM are guidelines on how to prioritize common comorbidities as well as medication management. The clarity and empirical basis of these clinical guidelines may underpin the finding that patients with high Axis 1 comorbidity had significantly lower dropout rates in GPM than their DBT counterparts (Wnuk et al., 2013). These findings are particularly important
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given that BPD is a disorder for which significant stigma may introduce barriers to sustained consistent care. With more optimism and more clear directives in clinical management, founded in up-to-date knowledge about the disorder as well as a relatable case formulation, clinicians may sustain care with BPD patients consistently and effectively enough to have good outcomes. It is arguable that what lends to GPM’s effectiveness is its core formulation of BPD, rendering its symptoms as expectable and understandable. Compared to DBT, mentalization-based treatment (MBT; Bateman & Fonagy, 1999; Bateman & Fonagy, 2006), and transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP; Clarkin & Kernberg, 2015; Clarkin, Levy, Lenzenweger, & Kernberg, 2007), GPM is a less ambitious treatment with less detail in its content and technique. Explicitly, it does not rest on psychotherapeutic skills as much as it rests of understanding the psychopathology of BPD. While skilled therapists of either cognitive behavioural or psychodynamic stripes can easily convey the approach using their well-honed psychotherapeutic demeanour, clinicians who serve as a psychopharmacologist, nurse practitioner, or case manager can apply GPM with common sense and good clinical management. GPM’s handbook (Gunderson & Links, 2014) is user friendly, briefly spanning under 70 pages of content plus an equal proportion illustrating the approach through case vignettes. GPM provides a road map for both the clinician and patient to navigate expectable areas of chaos and tension in the treatment alliance related to safety, intersession contact, management of complex comorbidity, and medication management. It directs the clinician to start the treatment with diagnosis and psychoeducation about BPD. Included in GPM’s psychoeducation is a review of BPD’s biological basis and heritability, natural course, co-occurrence with other disorders, and greater responsiveness to treatments that are psychotherapeutic rather than pharmacological. The psychoeducational, rather than psychotherapeutic, vehicle of delivering this information presents clinical facts about the disorder in a way that diminishes blame on families, thereby increasing sources of support. This approach also increases optimism and accountability. Change is presented as both possible and expected, and like any clinical intervention, GPM’s efficacy in any individual case is to be determined by progress in the patient’s decreasing symptomatology and increasing effectiveness in managing their illness and vulnerabilities. Within GPM’s medicalized formulation of BPD, interpersonal hypersensitivity is centralized as the core of the disorder (Gunderson & Lyons-Ruth, 2008). Symptoms of BPD are understood as resulting from an emotional cascade that begins with a real or perceived interpersonal threat (e.g., separation, criticism). The clinician actively hypothesizes that any emotional instability, impulsivity, or self-destructive behaviour has resulted from an interpersonal problem. The clinician works with the
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FIGURE 4.1 General Psychiatric Management’s formulation of borderline personality disorder (BPD) as a disorder of interpersonal hypersensitivity (Gunderson & Links, 2014). Note: This diagram models the influence of interpersonal context on the oscillation of symptoms in patients with BPD. When caregivers show concern and responsiveness, the patient remains in a stable state of connectedness. In this state, he or she remains anxious and hypervigilant to real or perceived signs of rejection of imminent abandonment. Inevitably, when the patient perceives abandonment or rejection, he or she exhibits aggressive or self-injurious behaviours, which in turn elicits either rescuing or withdrawal from the caregiver. If the caregiver provides rescue, or increased involvement, the patient returns to a connected state. If the caregiver withdraws, the patient devolves into aloneness and despair. An external container (e.g., hospital, jail) may then provide containment that relieves the sense of loneliness, and this support can return the patient to the connected state. See Gunderson and Links (2014), pp. 13–14.
patient to better understand his or her sensitivities to interpersonal stress and the impact of his or her responses. The BPD patient’s intolerance to aloneness is understood as the basis of frantic efforts to avoid abandonment, which paradoxically can ultimately push others away (Gunderson, 1996). It is in the withdrawal of others that the individual with BPD will shift into states of despair, suicidality, and paranoia. Here, interventions like hospitalization provide a form of holding and a grounds on which connection to others can be reestablished so the patient with BPD can reconstitute. The interpersonal hypersensitivity model (Fig. 4.1) explains the common shifts between anxiety, anger, and despair that define the affective lability in BPD. Unlike the shifts between elation, depression, and euthymia characteristic of bipolar disorder, affective lability in BPD is uniquely characterized by intense and frequent shifts between euthymia, anger, depression, and anxiety (Reich, Zanarini, & Fitzmaurice, 2012). The interpersonal hypersensitivity model also incorporates an understanding
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of the rejection sensitivity inherent to BPD that can determine the shifts between anxiety in anticipation of rejection as well as anger in reaction to perceived rejection (Ayduk et al., 2000; Staebler, Helbing, Rosenbach, & Renneberg, 2011). Cognitive priming tasks and experience-sampling diary methods provide corroborating evidence that rage contingent upon feelings of rejection is elevated in those with BPD (Berenson, Downey, Rafaeli, Coifman, & Paquin, 2011). This model of interpersonal hypersensitivity integrates psychodynamically rooted notions of BPD with modern empirical findings in an explanatory framework that ties BPD’s major affects – anxiety, anger, and despair – to interpersonal functioning. While this model provides a basis for conceptualization of how different symptoms of BPD evolve and function, it is not a treatment plan and does not encourage clinicians and patients to rely on suicidal crisis as a compensatory measure to reinstate idealized dependent connections with others. Rather, it instructs clinicians and patients alike to understand anger in reaction to threats and aloneness. With this understanding, clinicians can learn to lean in and help the patient understand and more effectively express their feelings when threatened or alone. Interventions which occurs at this level, while the patients remain engaged but before self-destructive action is taken, is preferred over unilateral interventions taken by the clinician to ensure the patient’s safety after destructive behavior (Fig. 4.2). Importantly, GPM conceptualizes states of anger as an understandable reaction to the threat of aloneness. Problems of anger, as a specific criterion of BPD, is poorly conceptualized by most treatments other than TFP. By formulating an understanding of the anger, it can be contained within the patient’s mind and also within the relationship, which potentially detoxifies it and renders it more approachable. If the clinician can then lean into the interaction during states of anger, when the patient is in fact seeking engagement and attempting, however, suboptimally, to communicate, the patient may feel more connected and less threatened, mitigating the descent into less workable, more mistrusting states of aloneness and suicidality. Over time, GPM aims to help the patient with BPD find different solutions to their problems of aloneness. Clinicians portray an air of doubt in response to idealized dependency as an adequate solution to poor self-esteem and underdeveloped coping strategies. Imperatives to get a life, to both become more self-reliant and develop more self-esteem, are central to GPM. This manoeuvre is founded on the observation that the interpersonal hypersensitivity has the potential to encourage recurrent suicidality, hospitalization, and crisis, as a means to solve problems of aloneness. The forces that can render a BPD patient chronic and disabled are to be taken seriously, so that GPM evaluates the outcome on the basis of its progress is helping the BPD patient get a life. Herein lies its corrective influence that can counter the iatrogenic effects of unstructured, non-BPD informed treatments.
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Mistrustful
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Connected idealizing, dependent
Threatened self-injuring, angry
Aloneness paranoid, impulsive
Despair suicidal
FIGURE 4.2 Accessibility of patient for intervention. Note: When the patient is connected or threatened (exhibiting anger or self-injurious behaviour), they are trusting and open to receiving intervention. It is optimal for clinicians to lean in when the patient is threatened, to help them understand and to resolve their current interpersonal dilemma. However, once the patient devolves to aloneness and despair, they become mistrustful and inaccessible. External interventions that rely less on the patient’s collaboration may be necessary at this point. Hence to diminish dependency, intervening before unilateral manaeuvers are required is optimal.
GPM relies on a case-management model approach to retain focus on a life outside of therapy. GPM prioritizes the attainment of stable vocational functioning over romantic relationships, as well as improvement in social functioning over specific symptom improvement. This prioritization is informed by longitudinal studies that show 68.6% of borderline patients achieve symptomatic remission after six years, yet only 32.6% achieve good overall psychosocial functioning (Zanarini, Frankenburg, Hennen, Reich, & Silk, 2005; Zanarini, Frankenburg, Hennen, & Silk, 2003). Therefore, GPM’s mechanism of change is to facilitate the natural course of the disorder’s improvement with specific attention to promoting functioning in endeavours outside of treatment, instead of focusing solely on symptom reduction, which might happen over time without specified treatment. The interpersonal hypersensitivity model provides a means to understanding why patients with BPD cycle through a dysfunctional pattern of repeated hospitalization and unguided polypharmacy which promotes the identity of being a patient, and depending on the system. Informed by this formulation, clinicians in GPM offer a corrective
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experience of promoting a life outside of treatment to provide a source of identity, structure, and meaning, while conveying healthy scepticism about the benefits of treatment or any exclusive relationship as a solution to their interpersonal sensitivities. The GPM case formulation is not one of detailed psychological insight but instead succinct and purposeful medical information. This focus aligns with findings from a study of case formulation in cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT): experienced clinicians developed more parsimonious and accurate formulations in comparison to their less experienced counterparts, who included more information and that led to errors in their formulation (Dudley, Ingham, Sowerby, & Freeston, 2015). Through focusing on medical knowledge about BPD and advising against initial diversions into exploration of personal histories, GPM keeps both clinician and client focused on key factors (i.e., psychoeducation, interpersonal hypersensitivity, getting a life) that lead to functional improvements. We will present a psychotherapeutic process with rationale behind treatment management decisions key to the GPM approach. The following clinical example illustrates GPM based case formulation and how it is employed in the context of care.
CASE VIGNETTE Emily is a 23-year-old single female, who is currently on her third medical leave from college. She is referred to Dr. G for a consultation after being discharged from her ninth hospitalization over the past three years. Emily has been treated for her depression and anxiety, with little relief and progressive functional decline. Emily presents as a soft-spoken, underweight, sullen woman. In the first appointment, she does not hesitate to enumerate her long history of self-harm, which began at the age of 12 when she was struggling socially in a small, private middle school. Emily had few friends, and her parents, who are successful professionals, spent much of their time while at home doing work. Emily reports that cutting relieves her emotional pain. Her parents learned of Emily’s consistent self-harm from a concerned school counsellor, and they promptly enrolled her in a different school and helped her find treatment. While her parents responded readily to crisis and showed support when she harmed herself, they generally shied away from talking about problems, as to not upset her more, fearing they would make things worse. Emily’s self-harm continued throughout high school, becoming more frequent and obvious when she began dating and disclosed to her parents that she was gay. Over the remainder of high school years, Emily was in multiple tumultuous relationships and began cutting more frequently. Despite her emotional difficulties, she performed well academically and was accepted to a prestigious small college in a rural setting. In college, she began overdosing on medications as well. Emily reports that throughout college she did not care if she lived and felt a constant struggle with sadness, anxiety, and feeling unloved. She tells Dr. G that she would overdose on a ‘handful’ of tablets of her gabapentin, which she knew wouldn’t kill her. She explains that if she had wanted to kill herself she could have.
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After multiple hospitalizations for her overdoses, Emily has taken her third medical leave and moved back home with her parents. Though Emily held down various jobs at the local shopping centre, her self-harming behaviours and ambiguous suicidality did not subside. Emily’s current therapist reported that Emily would not show up for appointments when she was most distressed and would not call the therapist before taking self-harming or suicidal actions. The therapist was no longer willing to work with Emily given the increase in both self-harming and suicidal behaviours. While Emily’s therapist has told Dr. G that she believed Emily has BPD, she has not disclosed the diagnosis to either Emily or her family. Emily: So Dr. G, are you going to take me on as a patient or not? I don’t want to waste your time if you are not interested in working with me. Dr. G: Before I answer that question, it is important for us to talk about how we understand the problems in your current treatment. If we can agree on an understanding of the problems and a way of working on them, then working together might make sense. Emily: Well, just tell me what to do and I will do it. My therapist clearly does not know what she is doing. Dr. G: I would agree with you that there is a problem in your treatment. The fact that you have been in the hospital nine times in three years is a sign that the treatment is not working. Emily: Are you saying this is my fault?! I knew it. I knew you would blame me just like she does. Dr. G: Let’s take a step back. It will only be a good idea to work together if we can actually collaborate. That means we need to step away from whose fault or responsibility it is and communicate. The first item of business I want to communicate is how I understand your problems. Emily: Okay, I’m listening. Dr. G: The failure of your current treatment suggests to me that the underlying problems are not being addressed. Hospitalization is a temporary band-aid but does not provide any lasting relief to your problems. I think your problems are best explained by a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder. Have you ever heard of it? Emily: Are you saying there is something wrong with my personality? That is pretty insulting. Dr. G: Yes, I am saying the way you manage yourself at points of stress and in relationships is the central problem. I can see why this might be perceived as a criticism, but I look at it differently and see the diagnosis as good news. It is a disorder that improves in a majority of cases over time and has many effective treatments. The good news is that you likely have not had relief from your psychiatric problems because this has not been addressed. Emily: Is that why the medications don’t work? I thought it was just that I was doomed and unhelpable. Dr. G goes on to provide basic psychoeducation about BPD, its natural course, and the expectation that with treatment, it can improve. Emily and Dr. G collaborate in thinking about how her history fits with the diagnosis. Dr. G notes that the pattern of either Emily taking matters into her own hands and self-harming or her therapist unilaterally hospitalizing her without discussions of what has happened is a sign of communication failures. Dr. G emphasizes the need for both Emily and Dr. G to contribute in the process. At the end of the session, Dr. G tells Emily to start by doing some homework on what her goals are for change.
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Case Formulation While there are many interesting and meaningful aspects of Emily’s history that can be employed in a psychodynamic formulation of the case, the GPM clinician opts to keep the interaction focused on the diagnosis and psychoeducation to frame the treatment in terms of its aim to reduce symptoms (i.e., self-harm or hospitalization), increase collaboration between Emily and Dr. G through communication, and increase functioning outside treatment. Before making links or interpretations to how this might have developed from early childhood influences, the GPM clinician will want to prioritize a collaborative means of setting up the treatment rationale, goals, and roles in a way that promotes the patient’s responsibility. While the model of interpersonal hypersensitivity is not yet made explicit, Dr. G can both see in Emily’s history and in her interactions with him that she is sensitive and quick to either blame herself or others when there is conflict. While he does not take this up right away, he does stay engaged when she becomes angry and clarifies his position through frank communication. Dr. G prioritizes building a shared focus on the problems of BPD and enlisting Emily’s involvement in developing goals above any opportunities to make interpretations and discuss the meaning of her actions. He meets the request to ‘tell her what to do’ by setting the stage that the treatment will depend on Emily’s activity in her life outside the sessions and builds an expectation of ‘homework’. In the next session, Emily arrives on time with her homework. She expresses feeling relieved she ‘finally has a therapist who wants to accomplish something’ and is receptive to Dr.G’s feedback. She tells Dr. G she feels much more motivated to get better with his support and direction. Dr. G shows enthusiasm for Emily’s goal of finishing school, pointing out how the recurrent hospitalizations interfere with that important task. Dr. G proposes that they work together to develop a better understanding of her suicide attempts as well as a plan for how Emily can manage differently. Dr. G: It will help to look at your last hospitalization and why it happened. If we understand it better, we can be in a better position to avoid it next time. Emily: I was doing okay during the last semester. My best friend Jane and I were spending a lot of time together doing homework. She made sure I woke up in time for classes, and brought me coffee and snacks when I was up late studying. I started to have more than a ‘just friends’ feelings for her and could not wait to hear from her or see her every day. After midterms, we were at a party and we both had too much to drink. I told her that I loved her and wanted to be more than just friends. After that, Jane started acting weird and stopped waking me up in the morning. Dr. G: Oh? And how did you react to that? Emily: I got really angry at Jane and called her all day long, sometimes telling her I needed her and other times telling her to never speak to me again since she was ruining my life. She then stopped talking to me altogether. I knew I fucked it up. I stopped going to class and just spent all my time in bed. My roommate also started avoiding me. I told my therapist I was feeling depressed, and she suggested
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I talk to the doctor about starting new medications. I started an antidepressant and antianxiety medication and felt worse, like nauseous and sleepy. I just could not function anyways at that point. I started taking more of the anxiety medication so I could sleep all day. Dr. G: It sounds like Jane’s availability to you was very important to your mood and ability to function. Emily: Yeah, my life pretty much revolved around her. I took it too far, as usual, and was left with nothing. I felt like my life was over and I would never get close to anyone again. I told my therapist I felt like it wasn’t worth it anymore. Dr. G: What do you mean, ‘not worth it anymore?’ Do you mean relationships, school, life? Emily: I guess I meant relationships. The problem was I just did not feel I could function without Jane. I did not want to live anymore, but was not planning on killing myself. My therapist got worried about me right before finals and kept asking me if I was safe. I could not manage any of my work, and was falling behind so just felt it would be better to drop out. I didn’t want to tell my parents that I was failing again. I could just see them saying ‘you do the same thing every year.’ They keep telling me to focus on my studies and I keep getting wrapped up in relationships. It was all in my head though, because when they saw me in the hospital, they were so worried and just told me everything would be okay. Dr. G: What happened that you ended up in the hospital? Emily: I didn’t show up for my appointment with my therapist and she kept calling me. I didn’t feel like talking to anyone, and knew if I talked to her she would want to talk about all the problems I was having. After the second missed appointment, she left a message to call her or she was going to hospitalize me. I didn’t call her back and ended up having the campus police take me to the emergency room. Dr. G: It helps me to hear the details of what happened so we can work on changing the way these things unfold. Last week, we discussed the diagnosis of borderline personality disorder. This week I want to review with you how this story you shared illustrates how vulnerable you can be around relationships. Dr. G starts explaining to Emily the interpersonal hypersensitivity model of GPM by taking out the GPM Handbook and showing her the diagram. Dr. G: When you are feeling connected in a relationship, like with Jane, you can feel better, receptive to encouragement and support, while somewhat anxious to see her. This sensitivity to her may develop into a dependency, in the absence of any stable way you feel you can manage on your own. Emily: That’s true. I do well at the start of relationships, but when they go downhill, I do too. Dr. G: I’m glad you see that because learning to rely more on yourself, while difficult and perhaps lonely, may provide more stability. The problem is that when Jane is out of the picture, you feel threatened because you depend on her so much. If that scares her away or makes it hard for her to talk to you, then you are really out on your own. This might be when you start to really develop despair, feel no one cares, or even worse are out to get you, and that life is not worth it. Emily: That is true. Once Jane stopped talking to me, I felt like nobody cared and that everyone was talking behind my back. I just couldn’t face anyone or anything, and it seemed there was no way out. I was kind of relieved to go to the hospital, just to end the feeling that I was trapped. Dr. G: That’s understandable, but will get in the way of your goal of finishing school. Finishing school may make you feel better about yourself, so your self-esteem does not rise and fall so much with one relationship.
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Emily: You make it sound easy. I can’t do it. I can’t cope on my own. Dr. G: I understand that has been the case for you. My job is to help you find ways to build your ability to rely on yourself. It will take time. To start, let’s first figure out a safety plan, that is, what you will do when you are starting to feel suicidal. Let’s plan ahead for it, so that the lack of communication that we can predict based on what happened with your last therapist does not land you in the hospital. Have you ever made a safety plan before? Emily: The doctors in the hospital sometimes would ask me to sign something saying I would not kill myself. Is that what you are asking? Dr. G explains safety planning (GPM Handbook pages 37–4, 152) and asks Emily to fill out her own safety plan for the next appointment. Emily comes to the third appointment having completed the safety plan. Dr. G explains he will be available during those times, but will rely on her ability to use her safety plan and community resources, including other supports, and the emergency room in case she cannot reach him. Dr. G: I want to underline one more thing about this model of your sensitivities to relationships. We can predict that what happened with Jane in terms of your overreliance on her and difficulty to communicate your needs, might happen here in this treatment. Emily: Don’t flatter yourself. I like women. No offense, I don’t go for men so you don’t need to worry about that. Dr. G: What I am saying is that there will be times I can be helpful and you will feel comfortably supported in a way that makes you depend on me, until I somehow let you down. Then you may feel frantic and angry. It will be essential that you talk to me about that instead of cutting yourself or ending up in the hospital. Emily: Okay, I don’t think that will happen. As much as I don’t go for men, I do trust you and think you are a much better doctor than my last therapist. Dr. G: My effectiveness in your care will be determined by whether or not we see a change in this pattern.
Case Formulation The GPM clinician, Dr. G, introduces the idea of reducing hospitalizations around the patient’s stated goal of finishing school, establishing the idea that treatment itself can actually interfere with building life structures that enable a person to develop the self-confidence needed to rely on themselves rather than others. He also introduces the interpersonal hypersensitivity model to provide a shared understanding of ‘suicidality’, or in this case her despair and loneliness that fueled a process of dropping out of life and allowing treatment to take over. While Emily is not expected to simply change from this insight, it starts a conversation about how the safety plan can be constructed to understand that being alone is a situation that can be helped by using other supports. While the clinician will be available, Dr. G also warns that the safety plan cannot revolve around Dr. G completely, and that Emily will have a key role in keeping herself safe and managing her vulnerabilities. She will better be able to do so by understanding what happens to make her more self-destructive.
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Notably, Emily is starting to feel buoyed up and optimistic due to the connection with Dr. G, not unlike her experience with Jane. GPM instructs clinicians to work against undue dependency and idealization of the clinicians, and Dr. G makes it clear Emily can do her part in the treatment to contribute to reaching its shared goal of her sustaining a life outside treatment. Dr. G uses the interpersonal hypersensitivity model to predict that what has happened in prior relationships, including in treatment, might recur in their treatment as well. He makes clear this is a part of her disorder and is expectable. It becomes the focus of the work, rather than a signal of Dr. G being a good or bad doctor. This is made distinct from whether or not the work they are doing is effective in terms of its goals. Dr. G begins meeting with Emily weekly, offering combined psychopharmacology and psychotherapy. The treatment goes relatively well – Emily is actively engaged and thoughtful. Two months into treatment, Dr. G needs to reschedule an appointment due to another meeting. During the time of their usual appointment, Emily sends Dr. G a series emails stating that she cut herself, refuses to see the covering doctor, and really needs to talk to him and can’t be safe without him. Over the next week, Emily does not respond to Dr. G’s emails or texts and does not come to the scheduled appointment. That night she calls Dr. G, sobbing, saying he is the only person who can help her. Dr. G says he looks forward to discussing this during their next session and she abruptly hangs up. Emily ends up going to the emergency room that night and accepts voluntary admission in the hospital. She does not self-harm or overdose before her admission and Dr. G visits her in the hospital the next day. Emily: Now you show up. Don’t you have a more important meeting or something? Dr. G: Ah, now that we are talking, I understand you are angry that I was not available at our usual time? Emily: That’s obvious. What kind of doctor are you? You are the one that keeps insisting I get a job, and right when I have an interview for a job I actually want you don’t bother to keep our appointment. Dr. G: I’m sorry that happened. It seems you really wanted to see me. I am encouraged by the fact you were invested in that job, but can also see your reliance on me for preparations failed you. Emily: I really wanted to talk to you to plan for it, exactly what I would say, and role play maybe? I ended up being so anxious, I could not do it. I wasn’t prepared so I didn’t go. Dr. G: I can see I failed you the week of the interview, but still don’t understand why you did not come to see me for our next appointment. Emily: What’s the point? I failed and this is not working. You are not there when I need you most. Dr. G: You are right. Our failure to collaborate has resulted in this hospitalization. We need to do a better job at talking about these feelings of anger before you start harming yourself and separating yourself from sources of support. Dr. G discusses his dilemma about hospitalization, i.e., that on the one hand it makes her safe, but on the other it has become a regressive and life-interfering means of managing her emotional dilemmas. Implicating himself as part of the problem, Dr. G refers to ‘our failure’ to have a constructive conversation about this in appointments and how that reflects the fragility of the treatment vis-à-vis Emily’s stated goals.
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Dr. G and Emily look more in detail at the chain of events leading to the self-harm with an emphasis on how Emily can help herself when she is in situations or emotional states that lead her to self-harm or overdose. He focuses on problem-solving efforts to emphasize her agency to manage safety. Without shaming her, Dr. G notes that her panic about his absence is quite extraordinary. He reminds her about interpersonal hypersensitivity, rejection sensitivity, and the basic attachment dilemmas in BPD, followed by developing a plan with Emily about its management. Lastly Dr. G suggests she tell her family about what happened. While Emily at first protests, she expresses willingness for them to join the next session to discuss Emily’s problems in terms of the framework of interpersonal hypersensitivity. Her parents are relieved to be included and agree with the framework. Dr. G emphasizes the importance of inviting and tolerating discussions of difficulties, rather than walking on eggshells to only engage when hospitalizations happen. Parents are advised to provide support when Emily is more isolated from friends or feeling rejected and agree broadening her system of support is the goal, not an overreliance on parents.
Case Formulation Despite the initial smooth sailing, recurrence of the patient’s poor communication in the face of perceived rejection or deprioritization is to be expected. This opportunity is again utilized by Dr. G to underline Emily’s interpersonal hypersensitivity as the focus on their work. Per the GPM framework, Dr. G remains engaged during Emily’s angry expressions of disappointment, and instead of being put off or withdrawing he remains curious to know what has happened for Emily and how she understands it. The effort to become more engaged rather than withdraw can provide a sense of containment for Emily so she can be more willing and receptive to using the treatment to better problem solve around her sensitivity to the availability of others. When Emily expresses her disappointments in Dr. G, he affirms his failures to meet her idealized need for him, in the hope that the disappointing reality of his, and anyone else’s, limited availability helps the patient develop a more realistic scepticism of their level of dependency on others. Dr. G also starts to involve family to help them understand Emily’s symptoms better, so they might cooperate with the aims of the treatment. Emily already demonstrated her interpersonal hypersensitivity to Dr. G, which he notices. In response, he advises she broaden her supports and enhances them by being more communicative and less reactive. In GPM, it is ideal to have families involved in the treatment for children with BPD. When safety issues are at hand, families benefit from having some education and can offer useful sources of support. After she is discharged, Dr. G and Emily resume therapy as usual and reschedule the job interview she missed. She gets the job and does well, receiving recognition for her work from her supervisor. Emily sees consistent improvements in self-harm over the next six months and reports feeling better overall. She stays out of the hospital, stating she does not want to lose her job. Her parents want her to move out but Emily is staunchly
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opposed to this. Dr. G and Emily work together to help her get past this barrier and continue to take steps toward getting a life.
CONCLUSIONS Emily’s case illustrates the clinical management style of GPM, which rests heavily on both the interpersonal hypersensitivity model for formulating the problems of BPD paired with the imperatives to get a life, as a corrective manoeuvre away from unrealistic regressive dependencies on treatment systems. This medicalized focus allows the clinician to advise patients on how to best manage their inherent vulnerabilities to minimize handicaps and maximize functioning. While GPM’s central formulation integrates both psychodynamic concepts and empirical findings on BPD, it relies on common sense problem solving rather than in depth exploration of past history or acquisition of an armamentarium of skills. Other intensive and more ambitious psychotherapies for BPD included in this book are highly effective, appealing, and interesting to patients and therapists as well. GPM might offer a basic approach that can be tried as a first line of treatment for generalist clinicians, not just therapists, can employ. Patients who fail GPM, might respond better to other more elaborate approaches (Choi-Kain, Albert, & Gunderson, 2016).
Acknowledgements The case vignette is a composite of a number of clinical experiences that have been veiled to protect patient confidentiality.
References Ayduk, O., Mendoza-Denton, R., Mischel, W., Downey, G., Peake, P. K., & Rodriguez, M. (2000). Regulating the interpersonal self: Strategic self-regulation for coping with rejection sensitivity. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 79(5), 776. Bateman, A., & Fonagy, P. (1999). Effectiveness of partial hospitalization in the treatment of borderline personality disorder: A randomized controlled trial. American Journal of Psychiatry, 156(10), 1563–1569. Bateman, A., & Fonagy, P. (2006). Mentalization-based treatment for borderline personality disorder: A practical guide. OUP Oxford. Berenson, K. R., Downey, G., Rafaeli, E., Coifman, K. G., & Paquin, N. L. (2011). The rejection–rage contingency in borderline personality disorder. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 120(3), 681. Choi-Kain, L. W., Albert, E. B., & Gunderson, J. G. (2016). Evidence-based treatments for borderline personality disorder: Implementation, integration, and stepped care. Harvard Review of Psychiatry, 24(5), 342–356. Clarkin, J. F., & Kernberg, O. F. (2015). Transference-focused psychotherapy for borderline personality disorder: A clinical guide. American Psychiatric Pub. Clarkin, J. F., Levy, K. N., Lenzenweger, M. F., & Kernberg, O. F. (2007). Evaluating three treatments for borderline personality disorder: A multiwave study. American Journal of Psychiatry, 164(6), 922–928.
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Cristea, I. A., Gentili, C., Cotet, C. D., Palomba, D., Barbui, C., & Cuijpers, P. (2017). Efficacy of psychotherapies for borderline personality disorder: A systematic review and metaanalysis. JAMA Psychiatry, 74(4), 319–328. Davidson, K. (2007). Cognitive therapy for personality disorders: A guide for clinicians. Routledge. Dudley, R., Ingham, B., Sowerby, K., & Freeston, M. (2015). The utility of case formulation in treatment decision making; the effect of experience and expertise. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 48, 66–74. Gunderson, J. G. (1996). The borderline patient’s intolerance of aloneness: Insecure attachments and therapist availability. American Journal of Psychiatry, 153(6), 752. Gunderson, J. G., & Links, P. (2014). Handbook of good psychiatric management for borderline personality disorder. American Psychiatric Pub. Gunderson, J. G., & Lyons-Ruth, K. (2008). BPD’s interpersonal hypersensitivity phenotype: A gene-environment-developmental model. Journal of Personality Disorders, 22(1), 22–41. Keuroghlian, A. S., Palmer, B. A., Choi-Kain, L. W., Borba, C. P., Links, P. S., & Gunderson, J. G. (2016). The effect of attending good psychiatric management (GPM) workshops on attitudes toward patients with borderline personality disorder. Journal of Personality Disorders, 30(4), 567–576. Linehan, M. (1993). Cognitive-behavioral treatment of borderline personality disorder. Guilford press. Linehan, M. M., Suarez, A., & Allmon, D. (1991). Cognitive-behavioral treatment of chronically. Archives of General Psychiatry, 48, 1060–1064. Masland, S. R., Price, D. G., MacDonald, J. M., Finch, E. F., Gunderson, J. G., & Choi-Kain, L. W. (2018). The enduring effects of one-day training in General Psychiatric Management on clinician attitudes about borderline personality disorder. Manuscript under review at Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. McMain, S. F., Guimond, T., Streiner, D. L., Cardish, R. J., & Links, P. S. (2012). Dialectical behavior therapy compared with general psychiatric management for borderline personality disorder: Clinical outcomes and functioning over a 2-year follow-up. American Journal of Psychiatry, 169(6), 650–661. McMain, S. F., Links, P. S., Gnam, W. H., Guimond, T., Cardish, R. J., Korman, L., et al. (2009). A randomized trial of dialectical behavior therapy versus general psychiatric management for borderline personality disorder. American Journal of Psychiatry, 166(12), 1365–1374. Reich, D. B., Zanarini, M. C., & Fitzmaurice, G. (2012). Affective lability in bipolar disorder and borderline personality disorder. Comprehensive Psychiatry, 53(3), 230–237. Staebler, K., Helbing, E., Rosenbach, C., & Renneberg, B. (2011). Rejection sensitivity and borderline personality disorder. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 18(4), 275–283. Summers, R. F. (2003). The psychodynamic formulation updated. American Journal of Psychotherapy, 57(1), 39–51. Wnuk, S., McMain, S., Links, P. S., Habinski, L., Murray, J., & Guimond, T. (2013). Factors related to dropout from treatment in two outpatient treatments for borderline personality disorder. Journal of Personality Disorders, 27(6), 716–726. Zanarini, M. C., Frankenburg, F. R., Hennen, J., Reich, D. B., & Silk, K. R. (2005). Psychosocial functioning of borderline patients and axis II comparison subjects followed prospectively for six years. Journal of Personality Disorders, 19(1), 19–29. Zanarini, M. C., Frankenburg, F. R., Hennen, J., & Silk, K. R. (2003). The longitudinal course of borderline psychopathology: 6-year prospective follow-up of the phenomenology of borderline personality disorder. American Journal of Psychiatry, 160(2), 274–283.
C H A P T E R
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Case Formulation in Schema Therapy: Working With the Mode Model Eva Fassbinder1, Odette Brand-de Wilde2, Arnoud Arntz2 1Department
of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Luebeck, Luebeck, Germany; 2Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
INTRODUCTION Schema therapy (ST) has developed as one of the major treatments for personality disorders (PD) in the last two decades, especially for the treatment of borderline personality disorder (BPD) and ClusterC-PD (Arntz & Jacob, 2012; Bamelis, Evers, Spinhoven, & Arntz, 2013; Fassbinder & Arntz, 2018; Jacob & Arntz, 2013; Masley, Gillanders, Simpson, & Taylor, 2012; Sempertegui, Karreman, Arntz, & Bekker, 2013). Case formulation is an integral part of ST. For every patient treated with ST an individual case formulation is worked out at the start of treatment. This individual case formulation helps to understand the patient’s current symptoms and interpersonal problems in the light of their developmental context. During the therapy process all arising problems are linked to this individual case formulation and therapeutic interventions are on the basis of the formulation. In this chapter, we first give an introduction to the underlying theory and central concepts related to case formulation in ST, then we provide a methodology for clinicians on how to further specify an individual case formulation by use of the mode model, and we show how case formulation affects the therapeutic strategy and helps to select a treatment focus.
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Underlying Theory and Central Concepts Related to Case Formulation in Schema Therapy ST, unlike more traditional cognitive behavioural therapies, places a great emphasis on developmental aspects of patients’ current symptoms and problems. ST states that the primary origins of PD pathology are unmet emotional needs (such as secure attachment, protection, love, attention, praise, autonomy, spontaneity, and play) in childhood, especially if traumatization of needs is related to the nuclear family. For young children their nuclear family is the entire world. By their experiences and the feedback they get they try to make sense of this world, to understand who they are and what their position in this world is. If basic childhood needs are met, children normally develop healthy views (schemas) of themselves, their relationships with others, and the world as a whole. On the other hand, if a child experiences trauma and frustration of such core emotional needs – in interaction with genetic, other biological and cultural/social factors – this leads to the development of early maladaptive schemas. Early maladaptive schemas are defined as broad pervasive life themes or patterns of information processing compromised of memories, emotions, cognitions, bodily sensations and attention preferences, which were developed during childhood or adolescence and elaborated throughout one’s lifetime (Young, Klosko, & Weishaar, 2003). Eighteen early maladaptive schemas have been described based on clinical observation and theoretical considerations (Young et al., 2003). Everyone has maladaptive and adaptive schemas, however, adaptive schemas have not been described yet. It should be noted that according to Young’s definition behaviours are not necessarily part of schemas. Behaviours might reflect the coping strategy with which an individual tries to deal with the schema, since if a schema gets activated it causes high distress to the individual. However, when the behaviours directly express the activated schema, then they are considered as part of the schema (e.g., a person showing clinging behaviour when an abandonment schema is activated). Thus, schemas highly influence behaviours, but behaviours are not always part of schemas. There are three coping styles:
• s urrender (giving in to the schema, feeling, thinking, and acting as if the schema is absolutely true), • avoidance (avoiding activation or awareness of the schema), and • overcompensation (feeling, thinking, and acting opposite to the schema).
Patients with severe PDs often display many schemas and react to them with varying coping styles. In clinical practice it can in such cases
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be very difficult to understand from the coping behaviour which schema is underneath and should be targeted by therapeutic interventions. Especially while working with patients with Cluster-B-PDs, Young discovered that the schema concept was too complicated to deal with frequent and rapid mood shifts. Due to this clinical experience he developed the schema-mode model, first for BPD patients and later for narcissistic patients (Young et al., 2003). Later disorder-specific schema-mode models were worked out for most other PDs and forensic patients (Arntz, 2012; Bamelis, Renner, Heidkamp, & Arntz, 2011; Jacob, van Genderen, & Seebauer, 2015; Lobbestael, Van Vreeswijk, & Arntz, 2008; Lobbestael, van Vreeswijk, Spinhoven, Schouten, & Arntz, 2010). A schema mode describes the predominant emotional-cognitive- behavioural state at a particular time point. A schema mode includes a combination of an activated schema and a coping strategy, in that sense that the activation of a schema (e.g., when a specific core need is frustrated) leads to a way of coping, which results in the schema mode (Activated schema → coping → schema mode) (van Wijk-Herbrink et al., 2017). A schema mode is a transient state, which can change quickly in response to external and internal triggers, while a schema is a trait, a stable characteristic of a person (Young et al., 2003). The schema-mode model is the key part of the case formulation that is shared with patients. To perform a successful ST treatment, it is essential that patients know their own mode model. Since the schemamode model is a key and unique element in case formulation in ST this chapter will concentrate on the mode model. However, it must always be remembered that schema modes are related to schemas and that when a schema mode is targeted, the associated schema is always also addressed. As can be seen from Fig. 5.1 there are four main groups of modes:
Maladaptive child modes are characterized by intensive affective states such as feeling lonely, sad, anxious, abandoned, helpless, needy, or unloved (vulnerable child modes); angry, defiant, or envious (angry child modes); and acting impulsively without thinking to get needs directly met (impulsive child modes). The emotions, perceptions, and behaviours resemble those of young children. These modes get activated when emotional core needs are endangered. Maladaptive parent modes are characterized by internalized negative ‘parental or significant other’s voices’ that criticize harshly and devalue patients (punitive parent mode) or pose high demands on them and pushes them to do everything perfect, to strive for achievement and success, or to take perfect care of others at the expense of own needs (demanding parent mode). These modes are associated with a lot of pressure, self-contempt, shame, self-hatred, and guilt.
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FIGURE 5.1 Basic structure of the mode model. Adapted from Arntz, A., & Jacob, G. A. (2012). Schema therapy in practice. Chichester: Wiley.
Maladaptive coping modes correspond to the coping styles (surrender, avoidance, and overcompensation). They are characterized by an excessive use of these strategies and are acquired early in childhood to adapt to the painful situation and to deal with the frustration of needs and are therefore regarded as ‘survival mechanism’. These ‘survival strategies’ might include very different behaviours associated with only one mode, e.g., in an avoidant coping mode, social withdrawal, drinking, binge eating, or dissociation might be apparent in the same patient, since all these behaviours might serve the function to avoid, reduce, or numb emotional pain. In adult life these modes still protect the person from vulnerable feelings. However, they also block the access to emotions and needs and do not allow individuals to form healthy relationships and to live a life according to their goals and values. Thus, in adult life the needs of the vulnerable child mode are still not fulfilled, as are some (essential) adult emotional needs, leading to a life with low quality and lack of self-fulfillment. There are two healthy modes, which represent functional states and should be strengthened in therapy. The healthy adult mode is the part of the self that takes care of the fulfillment of one’s needs and can deal with emotions. In this mode individuals make decisions and act in accordance with their needs, goals, and values, even if this might cause anxiety or emotional distress in the short run. They are respectful, supporting, and kind with themselves even if they make mistakes. The happy child mode is associated with fun, spontaneity, play, and fulfilment of emotional needs. In this mode people feel
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happy, accepted, loved, understood, and optimistic. The happy child mode helps to regulate distress and protects from psychiatric diseases. However, in people with PDs this mode is normally very weak.
More information and a detailed description of all modes can be found in the ST manual (Arntz & Jacob, 2012, 2017).
CASE FORMULATION WITH THE MODE MODEL Transdiagnostic and Disorder-Specific Approach ST was originally developed as a transdiagnostic approach. In the basic structure as shown in Fig. 5.1 with the four major groups of modes all symptoms and problems as well as healthy behaviours and attitudes can be accommodated. As stated earlier in the chapter, besides the transdiagnostic approach, disorder-specific mode models were developed and tested for most PDs, all but schizotypal and schizoid PD (Bamelis et al., 2011; Lobbestael et al., 2008, 2010). The disorder-specific mode models describe a specific pattern of dysfunctional modes which can be observed in most patients with the respective PD. As an example we describe the mode model of BPD (Arntz & van Genderen, 2009). Treatment based on that model has been evaluated successfully, especially in BPD and ClusterC-PD, but also in narcissistic, anti-social, and paranoid PD (Bamelis et al., 2013; Jacob & Arntz, 2013; Masley et al., 2012; Sempertegui et al., 2013). Disorder-Specific Mode Model of Borderline Personality Disorder Patients with BPD are in a detached protector mode most of the time, where they try to avoid feelings and needs. They detach themselves from other people, so that they cannot be hurt or abandoned. In this mode they do not want to talk, feel, or think, and they try to reach this, e.g., by means of avoidance, keeping others at a distance, taking drugs or drinking alcohol, binge eating, self-injury, dissociation, sleeping or staying in bed all day. Patients often feel empty and cold in this mode, however, most of the time they like this better than feeling the emotional turbulences of their child or parent modes. In the abandoned-abused child mode patients relive the trauma from childhood, they feel abandoned, sad, hopeless, and helpless, have intensive fears to be left alone, or to be hurt or mistreated. They strongly feel their emotional needs. However, they are desperate to get these needs met and if there was another person to care for them, most of the time they cannot trust this person or their punitive side does not allow them to have their needs fulfilled. In the angry, impulsive child mode patients with BPD act impulsively to get needs met and vent feelings in inappropriate ways, e.g., with rage attacks or being very demanding. In the angry child mode, they might accuse others in an inappropriate
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manner for not caring for them, putting pressure on them, e.g., by suicidal threats. The punitive parent mode is most of the times very strong in BPD patients. It shows in self-hatred, harsh self-criticism, shame, guilt, self-denial, and self-punishment (e.g., by self-injury, starving, not caring for the self). Healthy adult and happy child mode are normally very weak in the beginning of treatment.
Assessment of Relevant Information for Case Formulation We recommend a structured clinical interview to properly assess syndromal psychiatric diagnoses and PDs (e.g., by means of SCID Interviews) at the start of treatment. With the Young Schema Questionnaire (Young, 1998) and the Schema Mode Inventory (Lobbestael et al., 2010) schemas and modes can be measured via self-report. However, when evaluating these self-report measures it should be kept in mind that there might be biases, since people might lack insight, deny specific aspects, be unwilling to report or answer questions to be socially accepted. Especially for patients with strong overcompensating modes these limitations must be taken into account. Thus, data from these questionnaires is never enough to build a case concept on. Further information is needed as stated later in this chapter. At the start of treatment therapists assess the current problems and symptoms of a patient as well as their reasons for seeking treatment and their hopes related to treatment. Then the developmental history is carefully taken sometimes accompanied by diagnostic imagery exercises to get a clear view on the patient’s learning history. In these exercises the therapist helps the patient to imagine a disturbing situation when they were young, and makes this memory as vivid as possible by asking the patient to close his eyes, speaking in first person and present tense and paying close attention to the child’s emotions, cognitions, and needs. It must be noted, that in diagnostic imagery (unlike in imagery rescripting) the therapist does not change the ending of the memory. The primary aim is to better understand and experience the reality of the patient’s situation as a child and by this to clarify the origin of dysfunctional schemas and modes. It is, however, important to keep in mind that diagnostic imagery often leads to intense emotions. This can be overwhelming for patients, especially at the start of treatment and for severely ill patients that lack skills to regulate strong emotions and have strong fears of emotions. Thus, e.g., for patients with BPD, solely diagnostic imagery (without rescripting) is not recommend or to be performed with caution. We can especially recommend diagnostic imagery for patients with Cluster-C-PD, since these exercises help to overcome emotional inhibition, although they need some explanation and reassurance (Ten Napel-Schutz, Abma, Bamelis, & Arntz, 2011).
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Important Information for Building a Case Formulation • Primary diagnosis and comorbid psychiatric disorders • Current symptoms and problems of the patient • Patient’s request for help (what does the patient hope to achieve?) • Developmental information (if possible supported by diagnostic imagery to get an idea on unmet childhood needs and early coping strategies) including developmental problems, stressful live events, temperament, and (parent) modelling behaviour • Information on interpersonal interaction patterns (assessment of important interpersonal relationships and problems related to them as well as observation of interaction patterns in the therapeutic relationship) • Data from Schema Mode Inventory and Young Schema Questionnaire
Linking Symptoms and Problems to the Respective Modes From the first session on ST therapists pay attention to the patients’ modes and try to link the symptoms and problems the patient is presenting to the mode model and to understand relevant emotional-cognitive-behavioural patterns by use of the mode model. Although many symptoms, behaviours, and emotions can belong to different modes, there are some rules of thumb that help to conceptualize the presentations of patients:
• I ntense vulnerable feelings like sadness, anxiety, loneliness, or helplessness and emotional needs are most often connected to the vulnerable child modes. Also, behaviours and attitudes that seem childlike often belong to the child modes. • Self-punishment, self-devaluation, self-hatred, and harsh criticism of the self most often refer to punitive parent modes. While high demands on social behavior (e.g., ‘You have to care for others’; ‘It is not allowed to feel happy/do something nice, if someone has pain. That is egoistic’) or on achievement (e.g., ‘You can’t allow yourself any weaknesses’; ‘You have to be effective’; ‘First work, then pleasure’) are conceptualized in the demanding parent modes. These modes are often accompanied by feelings of shame and guilt. • Behaviours that help numbing emotions, needs, and thoughts, like substance abuse, binge eating, dissociation, gambling, watching TV, or cleaning the house all day, keeping away from others or unpleasant situations or not sharing personal information are most often connected with avoidant coping modes, e.g., detached protector mode, while passive, submissive behaviours, trying to do everything the interaction partner wishes, striving for harmony, taking over unpleasant tasks, and problems to say ‘no’ are typical behaviours of
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a compliant surrender mode. Overcompensation is often associated with feelings of power and control. Others often feel dominated by overcompensating modes and pushed into a corner. Here the therapist’s feelings are especially important to recognize these modes. Overcompensation might show in quite different behaviours: e.g., very arrogant, overly self-confident behaviour, often discrediting others (self-aggrandizer mode), aggressive and bullying behaviour (bully and attack mode), or overvigilant behaviour (suspicious or perfectionistic overcontroller modes). • All functional behaviour and attitudes are conceptualized to be part of the healthy adult mode. Keep in mind that every patient is supposed to have at least some healthy adult part, which helps the patient to seek help and maintain the therapeutic relationship.
However, there are many symptoms and emotions that can be related to different modes, even in the very same patient. Self-injury in BPD patients is a good example for that: Self-injury can be used in the punitive parent mode, e.g., to punish the patient for a mistake or for having ‘weak’ emotions and needs. It can also be part of the detached protector mode to get away from the painful emotional feelings (‘It is better to feel that physical pain, it distracts me from my “emotional chaos”’). Sometimes self-injury is connected to the angry-impulsive child mode, if needs were frustrated or endangered and the patient expresses and communicates anger with self-injury (‘You know, when you go out with Phil all night and leave me alone, I can’t stand that. You must have known before, that I would cut myself!’). Self-injury can also be driven by the vulnerable child mode, e.g., as a cry for help. To correctly conceptualize a symptom or behaviour to the respective mode therapists need to consider the context of the situation, the developmental aspects as well as to ask the patient about the behaviour and its function. If patients are familiar with the mode model, it is often easy for them to say in which mode a specific behaviour in a specific situation took place. Another example is feelings of anger, which is often connected to the angry child mode. This is especially the case when an important need was frustrated before and the behaviour does not seem like adult behaviour (e.g., patient after therapist did not answer an email: ‘I don’t want to talk to you today. You should better think about what you have done last week’). But anger can also occur in the angry protector mode. Here the angry behaviour serves to keep other people on a distance or to keep emotions away (‘I really do not feel like doing this silly exercise with your stupid chairs!’). While in the angry child mode the therapist can see the need behind the anger and most often feels that the patient wants connection, in the angry protector mode the therapist does not feel the need for close interpersonal contact. Anger can also be part of other coping modes, e.g., of the bully and attack modes. Here the therapist feels attacked and threatened. If anger is directed
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at the self, it is usually connected to the punitive parent mode. Lastly, of course anger can also be part of the healthy adult mode, e.g., if personal boundaries were crossed. Anger is then expressed in an appropriate manner and helps the individual to get its needs met. To efficiently conceptualize the mode model and to work out important connections between the modes therapists often ask directly for specific information (e.g., ‘You told me that you drink alcohol every day of the week, since your partner is only there on weekends. Does drinking alcohol help you to deal with vulnerable feelings, such as loneliness or sadness? … Can you tell me how you feel then in your own words?’)
Picking the Relevant Modes: Keep It as Simple as Possible It is the therapist’s responsibility to pick the most relevant modes and to keep the case formulation as simple as possible. Since there are many possible modes, this is sometimes a challenging task. The disorder-specific mode concepts support the therapist. Whenever a disorder-specific mode concept is available, the therapist uses this model as a rough frame for case formulation. Thus, if the patient has a BPD, the therapist expects that the patient will show a detached protector mode, a punitive parent mode, an abandoned-abused and angry, impulsive child mode as well as a healthy adult mode. This helps the therapist to pick the right modes with high probability and to concentrate on the most relevant modes. However, it must always be remembered that these concepts just provide a rough estimation. They always have to be adapted to the individual patient. Often, especially in the case of comorbidity, other modes which are not part of the disorder-specific model might be relevant also and need to be integrated in the patient’s individual case formulation. Where there is no disorder-specific mode model available the therapist uses the general approach as displayed in Fig. 5.1. It is recommended not to use more than seven dysfunctional modes, so that therapist and patient do not get lost in detail and concentrate on the most essential problems. This might mean to integrate two modes as one mode, e.g., the angry and the impulsive child mode can be matched to an angry/ impulsive child mode (like in the above explained BPD-specific model), or to leave out modes that are not so essential. Especially for the coping modes this might be relevant, since patients often display several coping strategies.
Introduction of the Case Formulation Introduction of the Mode Model and the Vulnerable Part After the most important information is assessed, which is normally the case no later than after the first six sessions, the therapist will introduce
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the mode model to the patient and work out an individual case formulation with the patient. In the following we will illustrate a step-by-step introduction of the mode model with an example of avoidant PD (AVD). The disorder-specific mode model of AVD includes a lonely child mode, a punitive parent mode, an avoidant protector mode and as all models a healthy adult mode. Thus, the therapist expects these modes, but is also open for other aspects. To introduce the mode model the therapist might say: ‘Today I would like to sum up with you, what we have learnt so far. I would like to bring all the problems you told me about into an individual model, which explains us better why the things are the way they are and how you can better deal with them. In ST we work with a model which is called the mode model. Basically it states that each person has different parts or sides of the self. For example everybody has a vulnerable part. This is where people feel very lonely, sad or anxious. And all people have a part that puts pressure on them, devalues them and is very critical. And there are also other parts I will explain to you later … I would like to start with this vulnerable part. You told me that you often feel very insecure and anxious that someone will criticize you or that you might be attacked for doing something wrong. These fears belong to your vulnerable part, I guess. Do you understand, what I mean? … Can you tell me how you feel when you are in that vulnerable part?’ The therapist will focus on other important vulnerable emotions and needs and validated them ‘You also said that although you are afraid to get in contact with other people, since they might reject you, you often feel very sad and lonely and wish for contact. These feelings of sadness and loneliness and the wish for contact also belong to the vulnerable part of you. It is quite normal that on the one hand there is a part of you who wants to protect yourself from being ashamed and rejected and avoids contact with other, and on the other hand there is this vulnerable part that wishes for contact and feels lonely. We will look at this protecting part later’. If possible, the therapist directly makes the connection with the developmental context and educates the patient about needs: ‘I think these feelings of your vulnerable part are so intensive, since you were indeed very lonely in childhood. There was nobody to soothe you and nobody with whom you could talk about what was going on in you. And if you said something you did not make good experiences by that, you often were rejected or made ridiculous. I remember the diagnostic imagery we did together, that one with the family dinner, where there was such a cold atmosphere and your dad criticized you for everything you did and made fun of you. And the other one, where you were alone in your room crying and nobody was there. This is not normal for children. Children need a parent, who loves them, holds them and cares for them. A parent that listens to them and soothes them and does not always criticize everything they do. Children need to be accepted the way they are. This way they can learn healthy things about themselves … As these very basic needs were so harshly frustrated in your
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childhood, it is quite normal that you still feel so lonely, sad, anxious and insecure when you are in that vulnerable part’. To make the case formulation as individual as possible patients choose names for each mode. The therapist introduces this idea and asks the patients directly for a name: ‘In ST this vulnerable part is called “the vulnerable child mode”. It is important that the mode model we work out today is entirely your model and matching to you individually. Also it is good if we directly have a label for each side, so that we can directly catch it and the two of us know what we are talking about. Thus, it would be great if we can find names for each part of you. Do you have an idea, how we can name that vulnerable part of you? … In ST we aim to better care for this mode and welcome it, thus it would be great to have a sweet, nice name for it’. If the patient does not have any idea, the therapist might make a proposal: ‘What do you think about “Little Frank”?’ While working out the individual case formulation with the patient, the therapist directly draws an illustration at the flip chart or on a paper. He draws a circle on the right side at the bottom of the page for the dysfunctional child modes and writes down the feelings the patient names when in this mode. The developmental context should be brought into that model by arrows connecting childhood experiences to specific modes. Introduction of the Parent Modes To introduce the parent modes the therapist might say: ‘And there is another part in you, where you are very mean with yourself and blame yourself very badly. In ST we call it the punitive part? Do you know what I mean?’ In this example the therapist calls the punitive parent mode only ‘punitive mode’ and leaves out the ‘parent’. This can sometimes be a good strategy to reduce resistance from patients due to feelings of guilt and loyalty. The therapist then explores the parent mode further by asking for associated cognitions, emotions, and behaviours: ‘What does this part say to you? … Wow, these are very harsh messages. How do you feel like, when you hear those messages? … Is there any behaviour you know from yourself, that is associated with this punitive side of you?’ Then he might again turn to the developmental aspects: ‘These punitive modes most often develop if a child was treated badly by important other persons, e.g. when a child is often devaluated, criticized, made ridiculous, or punished harshly for mistakes or for telling how it feels or what it needs. Some people say that they can directly say, whose messages they hear, when they are in that mode. Do you have an idea where this mode has its roots in your development?’ The therapist might also directly share developmental hypotheses (e.g., ‘I can imagine that this punitive side developed, since your father was very critical with you and also you told me that you were bullied in school, since you were afraid to talk. What do you think about that?’) The therapist then again asks for a name and writes the information for the punitive side in another circle above the vulnerable child mode.
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Introduction of the Coping Modes The therapist then educates the patient about the coping modes: ‘As we worked out there are many unpleasant emotions in the “Little Frank” mode here (points on the vulnerable child circle in the illustration). He feels very insecure, is afraid to be rejected and the “Devaluer” from above blames him and tells him what a shame he is (points on the punitive side circle). And that was how your reality was every day in childhood, wasn’t it? … If you said something you were criticized and hurt, thus, as a strategy to protect yourself you stopped talking, avoided contact or any attention from others, tried to get invisible, when in contact with others. This is a smart strategy and it was a very healthy choice under these circumstances, we call it a “survival strategy” in ST … What do you think about that? … This part is called “Avoidant Protector Mode” in ST. Do you have a name for your protector part?’ As can be seen from the description it is very important to validate the function of this mode throughout. The therapist tries to get more information about this mode and educates the patient further: ‘Are there any other behaviours associated with your “Protector”? … Hmm, you told me, that you often watch TV all night long and spend hours on the internet with gambling and from time to time you smoke pot. I guess, these behaviours are also connected to your “Protector”. Maybe this helps you to deal with the sadness and loneliness of “Little Frank”? Maybe it is a safe substitute for the contact he wishes to have? What do you think about that?’ The therapist draws a box on the left side of the illustration and again writes down the most important information. Introduction of the Healthy Adult Mode Finally, the healthy adult mode is conceptualized with the patient, which is most of the time pleasant for patients, since it shows that they have a functional side and strengths. The therapist reinforces this side: ‘Then there is also a functional side in you. This is the side that said: “It cannot go on like this. I have to change something and get help” and has come to therapy, although you were afraid to come here … that is the side that tells me openly about all your problems, although you find talking difficult. This is also the side that keeps up the friendship with Steven and which goes to work every day … This side is called the healthy adult. We might call it “Adult Frank”, if this is okay for you?’ The healthy adult side is also added to the illustration to finalize the first version of the mode model (see Fig. 5.2). Patient and therapist will discuss the mode model further. While educating the patient with the mode model the therapist keeps track and discusses all important issues and modes. Especially the symptoms and problems that have subjectively the highest burden for the patient should be covered. Even if ST therapists are quite direct when introducing the case formulation, it is always a collaborative work of patients and therapists. Therapists give a frame and
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Case Formulation With the Mode Model
‘Grown-up Frank’ Comes to therapy, job, friendship with Stephen ‘Survical strategy’ to offer less opportunity for being critizised and protection from shame and feelings of loneliness and sadness
The Protector • Not talking, trying to be invisible • Not sharing personal information • Social withdrawal • Cannabis, TV, internet gambling
‘The Devaluear’ You are too stupid! You are inferior, a shame! Shame, guilt
Messages and behaviors of father, bullying at school
Emotional needs for secure attachment, warmth, acceptance, and praise, were frustrated
Little Frank anxious, insecure, sad, lonely
FIGURE 5.2 Frank’s mode model.
then discuss everything individually with the patient. Often therapists explain a mode or a group of modes and give some example from people in general or from what the patient has told before (both is validating for patients) to introduce the patient with the mode, they then request feedback, ask the patients what they experience in this mode, and discuss the functions of the mode, e.g., by use of Socratic dialogue. It is important that the model fits for both therapist and patient, thus ST therapists are very open for discussion and different opinions. The therapist does not force the patient to accept a mode or a conceptualization of a symptom but is clear about the model and sticks to important points of it (e.g., everybody has a vulnerable side). If there is a disagreement that cannot be resolved, the therapist proposes to return to this issue later. For example, if narcissistic patients deny their vulnerable child mode, the therapist might leave out the circle for the vulnerable child mode in the illustration in the beginning, but will discuss the mode further later in treatment and will try ways to help the patient accept this mode. In most cases therapists follow the above shown way for case formulation: First child and parent modes are discussed to validate the emotional suffering of patients, then often as the most severe part the coping modes are introduced as a ‘survival strategy’ to deal with the suffering. Finally, the healthy adult mode is communicated. However, the therapist might deviate from this order, e.g., if a patient seems not very open for one or another mode, the therapist might pick another order to make the model more acceptable for the patient.
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Impact of Case Formulation on the Course of Therapy In ST the case formulation guides the whole treatment. For each mode there are specific goals and techniques. Maladaptive coping modes normally dominate in the start of treatment. The therapist’s goal is to get through these coping modes. To do so the therapist helps patients to understand why these modes developed and value their adaptive function. They then carefully weigh pros and cons of these modes, make clear that these modes hinder patients to fulfil their emotional needs and empathically confront patients to reduce these modes and teach them healthier strategies. This opens the door to the vulnerable child modes, which are supported and comforted to heal the emotional wounds from childhood. Therapists encourage patients to show their emotions and feel their needs and validate them and help with the fulfilment of needs. The specific design of the therapy relationship as ‘limited reparenting’, meaning that the therapist behaves – within the professional boundaries of a therapy relationship – as a good parent figure to offer an antidote to traumatization in childhood and to offer corrective emotional experiences. An integral part of healing the child modes is use of experiential techniques such as imagery rescripting and chair dialogues to promote emotional processing of traumatic childhood memories. In Frank’s example from earlier in the chapter, the therapist might do an imagery rescripting exercise of the family dinner, where the father was so critical. In the rescripting part the therapist enters the scene, stops the father and tells him that it is poison for children if their parents are emotionally so cold and critical and that Frank needs acceptance and praise instead. Since the father does not stop, the therapist ‘performs magic’ and shrinks the father so that he is only 10 cm and lets him speak with a ‘mickey mouse’ voice. Although Little Frank has to laugh a bit, he still feels uncomfortable and lonely. Thus, the therapist brings Frank to his very gentle Grandma who soothes Little Frank and hugs him. Dysfunctional parent modes should also be reduced, ST therapist even ‘combat’ these modes to reduce their influence in the patient’s life. This is mainly done by means of experiential techniques, e.g., by placing the punitive parent mode in a chair and ‘fighting it’ or by stopping an abusive parent in an imagery rescripting exercise (like described above). The healthy modes are strengthened throughout the whole therapy process by a variety of techniques. These goals are made transparent to the patient directly from the beginning. Besides cognitive and behavioural techniques there is a strong emphasis on experiential techniques and the therapy relationship to reach these goals. We refer to the treatment manuals of ST in general (Jacob et al., 2015; Young et al., 2003) and ST for BPD (Arntz & van Genderen, 2009) for further explanation on these goals and techniques. Patients might be
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